@article{Meng2019, doi = {10.1038/s41467-019-11126-8}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11126-8}, year = {2019}, month =
jul, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{10}, number = {1}, author = {Ran Meng and Mengqiu Jiang and Zhicheng
Cui and Jeng-Yih Chang and Kailu Yang and Joanita Jakana and Xinzhe Yu
and Zhao Wang and Bo Hu and Junjie Zhang}, title = {Structural basis for
the adsorption of a single-stranded RNA bacteriophage}, journal =
{Nature Communications} } @article{Salem2020, doi =
{10.1186/s13293-020-00327-2}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s13293-020-00327-2}, year = {2020}, month =
sep, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{11}, number = {1}, author = {Nihal A. Salem and Amanda H. Mahnke and
Alan B. Wells and Alexander M. Tseng and Lyubov Yevtushok and Natalya
Zymak-Zakutnya and Wladimir Wertlecki and Christina D. Chambers and
Rajesh C. Miranda and}, title = {Association between fetal sex and
maternal plasma microRNA responses to prenatal alcohol exposure:
evidence from a birth outcome-stratified cohort}, journal = {Biology of
Sex Differences} } @article{Hwang2020, doi = {10.1073/pnas.2005899117},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2005899117}, year = {2020}, month =
aug, publisher = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
volume = {117}, number = {35}, pages = {21336--21345}, author = {Wonmuk
Hwang and Robert J. Mallis and Matthew J. Lang and Ellis L. Reinherz},
title = {TheαβTCR mechanosensor exploits dynamic ectodomain allostery to
optimize its ligand recognition site}, journal = {Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences} } @article{Krieger2020, doi =
{10.1016/j.jmb.2020.06.013}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2020.06.013}, year = {2020}, month = jul,
publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {432}, number = {16}, pages =
{4623--4636}, author = {Inna V. Krieger and Vladimir Kuznetsov and
Jeng-Yih Chang and Junjie Zhang and Samir H. Moussa and Ryland F. Young
and James C. Sacchettini}, title = {The Structural Basis of T4 Phage
Lysis Control: DNA as the Signal for Lysis Inhibition}, journal =
{Journal of Molecular Biology} } @article{Shi2020, doi =
{10.1016/j.bpj.2020.03.026}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2020.03.026}, year = {2020}, month = may,
publisher = {Elsevier {BV}}, volume = {118}, number = {10}, pages =
{2502--2512}, author = {Jie Shi and Qingliang Shen and Jae-Hyun Cho and
Wonmuk Hwang}, title = {Entropy Hotspots for the Binding of
Intrinsically Disordered Ligands to a Receptor Domain}, journal =
{Biophysical Journal} } @article{Xing2020, doi =
{10.3389/fgene.2020.00082}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2020.00082}, year = {2020}, month = feb,
publisher = {Frontiers Media SA}, volume = {11}, author = {Yue Xing and
Alan R. Dabney and Xiao Li and Guosong Wang and Clare A. Gill and
Claudio Casola}, title = {SECNVs: A Simulator of Copy Number Variants
and Whole-Exome Sequences From Reference Genomes}, journal = {Frontiers
in Genetics} } @article{Mateos2019, doi = {10.1002/ece3.4874}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4874}, year = {2019}, month = jan,
publisher = {Wiley}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {1845--1857},
author = {Mariana Mateos and Omar Domínguez-Domínguez and Alejandro
Varela-Romero}, title = {A multilocus phylogeny of the fish
Poeciliopsis: Solving taxonomic uncertainties and preliminary evidence
of reticulation}, journal = {Ecology and Evolution} }
@article{Eggleston2020, doi = {10.1186/s12864-020-06981-5}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-06981-5}, year = {2020}, month =
aug, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{21}, number = {1}, author = {Heather Eggleston and Zach N. Adelman},
title = {Transcriptomic analyses of Aedes aegypti cultured cells and ex
vivo midguts in response to an excess or deficiency of heme: a quest for
transcriptionally-regulated heme transporters}, journal = {BMC Genomics}
} @article{Yang2020, doi = {10.1186/s12934-020-01463-5}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-020-01463-5}, year = {2020}, month =
nov, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{19}, number = {1}, author = {Fang Yang and Jennifer A. A. DeLuca and
Rani Menon and Erika Garcia-Vilarato and Evelyn Callaway and Kerstin K.
Landrock and Kyongbum Lee and Stephen H. Safe and Robert S. Chapkin and
Clinton D. Allred and Arul Jayaraman}, title = {Effect of diet and
intestinal AhR expression on fecal microbiome and metabolomic profiles},
journal = {Microbial Cell Factories} } @article{Dadaneh2020, doi =
{10.1186/s12864-020-06938-8}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-06938-8}, year = {2020}, month =
sep, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{21}, number = {S9}, author = {Siamak Zamani Dadaneh and Paul de
Figueiredo and Sing-Hoi Sze and Mingyuan Zhou and Xiaoning Qian}, title
= {Bayesian gamma-negative binomial modeling of single-cell RNA
sequencing data}, journal = {BMC Genomics} } @article{Orr2020, doi =
{10.1016/j.compchemeng.2020.107063}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compchemeng.2020.107063}, year = {2020},
month = dec, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {143}, pages =
{107063}, author = {Asuka A. Orr and Shujun He and Meichen Wang and
Alicia Goodall and Sara E. Hearon and Timothy D. Phillips and Phanourios
Tamamis}, title = {Insights into the interactions of bisphenol and
phthalate compounds with unamended and carnitine-amended montmorillonite
clays}, journal = {Computers & Chemical Engineering} }
@article{Khan2020, doi = {10.7554/elife.57081}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.57081}, year = {2020}, month = aug,
publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd}, volume = {9}, author =
{Danish Khan and Dongju Lee and Gulcin Gulten and Anup Aggarwal and
Joshua Wofford and Inna Krieger and Ashutosh Tripathi and John W Patrick
and Debra M Eckert and Arthur Laganowsky and James Sacchettini and Paul
Lindahl and Vytas A Bankaitis}, title = {A Sec14-like
phosphatidylinositol transfer protein paralog defines a novel class of
heme-binding proteins}, journal = {eLife} } @article{Jing2020, doi =
{10.1126/sciadv.aba7880}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aba7880}, year = {2020}, month = jul,
publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS)}, volume = {6}, number = {31}, author = {Zhao Jing and Shengpeng
Wang and Lixin Wu and Ping Chang and Qiuying Zhang and Bingrong Sun and
Xiaohui Ma and Bo Qiu and Justing Small and Fei-Fei Jin and Zhaohui Chen
and Bolan Gan and Yun Yang and Haiyuan Yang and Xiuquan Wan}, title =
{Maintenance of mid-latitude oceanic fronts by mesoscale eddies},
journal = {Science Advances} } @article{Karimi2020, doi =
{10.1093/bioinformatics/btaa317}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btaa317}, year = {2020}, month =
jul, publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, volume = {36}, number
= {Supplement_1}, pages = {i445--i454}, author = {Mostafa Karimi and
Arman Hasanzadeh and Yang Shen}, title = {Network-principled deep
generative models for designing drug combinations as graph sets},
journal = {Bioinformatics} } @article{Cao2020, doi =
{10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00476}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00476}, year = {2020}, month = jun,
publisher = {American Chemical Society ACS)}, volume = {16}, number =
{8}, pages = {5334--5347}, author = {Yue Cao and Yang Shen}, title =
{Bayesian Active Learning for Optimization and Uncertainty
Quantification in Protein Docking}, journal = {Journal of Chemical
Theory and Computation} } @article{Dalaijamts2020, doi =
{10.1016/j.taap.2020.115069}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.taap.2020.115069}, year = {2020}, month =
aug, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {400}, pages = {115069}, author
= {Chimeddulam Dalaijamts and Joseph A. Cichocki and Yu-Syuan Luo and
Ivan Rusyn and Weihsueh A. Chiu}, title = {PBPK modeling of impact of
nonalcoholic fatty liver disease on toxicokinetics of perchloroethylene
in mice}, journal = {Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology} }
@article{Ogunka2020, doi = {10.3390/biomimetics5010009}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics5010009}, year = {2020}, month =
mar, publisher = {MDPI AG}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {9},
author = {Uchenna E. Ogunka and Mohsen Daghooghi and Amir M. Akbarzadeh
and Iman Borazjani}, title = {The Ground Effect in Anguilliform
Swimming}, journal = {Biomimetics} } @article{Kawaguchi2020, doi =
{10.1074/jbc.ra119.010252}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.ra119.010252}, year = {2020}, month = feb,
publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {295}, number = {9}, pages =
{2640--2649}, author = {Madoka Kawaguchi and Nurmaa Dashzeveg and Yue
Cao and Yuzhi Jia and Xia Liu and Yang Shen and Huiping Liu}, title =
{Extracellular Domains I and II of cell-surface glycoprotein CD44
mediate its trans-homophilic dimerization and tumor cluster
aggregation}, journal = {Journal of Biological Chemistry} }
@article{Orr2020, doi = {10.1016/j.bpj.2019.11.3382}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2019.11.3382}, year = {2020}, month =
jan, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {118}, number = {2}, pages =
{492--504}, author = {Asuka A. Orr and Jingyun Yang and Nitesh Sule and
Ravi Chawla and Kenneth G. Hull and Mingzhao Zhu and Daniel Romo and
Pushkar P. Lele and Arul Jayaraman and Michael D. Manson and Phanourios
Tamamis}, title = {Molecular Mechanism for Attractant Signaling to DHMA
by E.coli Tsr}, journal = {Biophysical Journal} } @article{Hu2019, doi =
{10.1038/s41467-019-12452-7}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-12452-7}, year = {2019}, month =
oct, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{10}, number = {1}, author = {Yong-Jie Hu and Ge Zhao and Baiyu Zhang
and Chaoming Yang and Mingfei Zhang and Zi-Kui Liu and Xiaofeng Qian and
Liang Qi}, title = {Local electronic descriptors for solute-defect
interactions in bcc refractory metals}, journal = {Nature
Communications} } @article{Wang2019, doi = {10.1126/sciadv.aav9743}, url
= {https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aav9743}, year = {2019}, month = aug,
publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS)}, volume = {5}, number = {8}, author = {Hua Wang and Xiaofeng
Qian}, title = {Ferroicity-driven nonlinear photocurrent switching in
time-reversal invariant ferroic materials}, journal = {Science Advances}
} @article{Boluki2019, doi = {10.1186/s12859-019-2832-3}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-019-2832-3}, year = {2019}, month = jun,
publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume = {20},
number = {S12}, author = {Shahin Boluki and Siamak Zamani Dadaneh and
Xiaoning Qian and Edward R. Dougherty}, title = {Optimal clustering with
missing values}, journal = {BMC Bioinformatics} }
@article{Hajiramezanali2019, doi = {10.1186/s12864-019-5720-3}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-019-5720-3}, year = {2019}, month = jun,
publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume = {20},
number = {S6}, author = {Ehsan Hajiramezanali and Mahdi Imani and
Ulisses Braga-Neto and Xiaoning Qian and Edward R. Dougherty}, title =
{Scalable optimal Bayesian classification of single-cell trajectories
under regulatory model uncertainty}, journal = {BMC Genomics} }
@article{Zapletal2020, doi = {10.1098/rstb.2019.0804}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0804}, year = {2020}, month = dec,
publisher = {The Royal Society}, volume = {376}, number = {1818}, pages
= {20190804}, author = {Josef Zapletal and Neda Najmitabrizi and Madhav
Erraguntla and Mark A. Lawley and Kevin M. Myles and Zach N. Adelman},
title = {Making gene drive biodegradable}, journal = {Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences} }
@article{Chiu2020, doi = {10.1038/s41562-020-00969-7}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-020-00969-7}, year = {2020}, month =
oct, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{4}, number = {10}, pages = {1080--1090}, author = {Weihsueh A. Chiu and
Rebecca Fischer and Martial L. Ndeffo-Mbah}, title = {State-level needs
for social distancing and contact tracing to contain COVID-19 in the
United States}, journal = {Nature Human Behaviour} }
@article{SHIN2022101618, title = {On simulating impact fracture in
high-strength concrete using GraFEA}, journal = {Extreme Mechanics
Letters}, volume = {52}, pages = {101618}, year = {2022}, issn =
{2352-4316}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eml.2022.101618}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352431622000086},
author = {H.Y. Shin and P. Thamburaja and A. Srinivasa and J.N. Reddy},
keywords = {Concrete, Constitutive theory, Graph-based FEA, Non-local
fracture, Impact prediction}, abstract = {In this work, we use a
recently-formulated Graph-based Finite-Element Analysis (GraFEA)
framework developed for modeling deformation and non-local fracture in
quasi-brittle materials to simulate the fracture response of
high-strength concrete (HSC) samples under impact loads. By fitting the
material parameters in the theory to match a macroscopic
force–displacement response obtained from a three-point bending
experiment conducted under quasi-static conditions, we show that the
GraFEA computational method is able to independently validate the
experimentally-determined impulse response, obtained from impact
experiments conducted under various initial impact speeds imposed by a
drop-weight on HSC samples that are 6 to 7 orders of magnitude higher
than the quasistatic tests. Furthermore, the GraFEA-based FEM
simulations are also able to reproduce experimental crack propagation
speeds in a HSC sample under different initial impact speeds to good
accord.} } @article{YANG2022122639, title = {Deep convolutional
autoencoder augmented CFD thermal analysis of bearings with inter pad
groove mixing}, journal = {International Journal of Heat and Mass
Transfer}, volume = {188}, pages = {122639}, year = {2022}, issn =
{0017-9310}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2022.122639}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0017931022001211},
author = {Jongin Yang and Alan Palazzolo}, keywords = {Thermal analysis,
Rotor-bearing heat transfer, Deep learning, Groove mixing}, abstract =
{The treatment of thermal mixing in inter pad grooves of a fluid film
bearing is essential due to its influence on the heat transfer with the
rotating shaft and stationary bearing. Lower fidelity models that either
neglect or over approximate thermal groove mixing may lead to premature
bearing or machinery failure, most commonly from babbitt thermally
induced fatigue. Conventional models rely on bulk flow and thermal
analyses yielding a single temperature at the groove outlet into the pad
inlet. The high uncertainty of this approach carries over into
downstream predictions for bearing life, stiffness and damping, and
machinery vibration predictions. Contrary to a uniform temperature,
CFD-Conjugate heat transfer studies reveal large gradient temperature
distributions varying in both the radial and axial directions at the
groove outlet, especially with jet lubrication implemented with multiple
nozzles. These distributions vary continuously with time as the spinning
shaft and bearing pads vibrate. A direct CFD simulation thus becomes
computationally prohibitive. The present work introduces a novel
approach which yields highly detailed lubricant temperature
distributions at the pad inlets in a computationally economical manner.
This is implemented with a surrogate groove model via a deep
convolutional autoencoder neural network based on CFD (Computational
Fluid Dynamics) data. The trained Convolutional Neural Network (CNN)
shows excellent prediction capability for 2D temperature distribution at
a circumferential groove outlet. The trained CNN is combined with a
rotor-bearing model, and the combined model is verified by full CFD
results and experimental data. In addition, this approach is expanded to
include various oil injection types, illustrating their detailed heat
transfer to the rotating shaft and bearing.} } @article{Li2021, doi =
{10.3389/fgene.2021.661440}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.661440}, year = {2021}, month = may,
publisher = {Frontiers Media SA}, volume = {12}, author = {Jingjia Li
and Jason B. West and Alexander Hart and Jill L. Wegrzyn and Matthew A.
Smith and Jean-Christophe Domec and Carol A. Loopstra and Claudio
Casola}, title = {Extensive Variation in Drought-Induced Gene Expression
Changes Between Loblolly Pine Genotypes}, journal = {Frontiers in
Genetics} } @article{Muthusamy2021, doi =
{10.1016/j.buildenv.2021.108280}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2021.108280}, year = {2021}, month =
dec, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {206}, pages = {108280}, author
= {Jayaveera Muthusamy and Syed Haq and Saad Akhtar and Mahmoud A.
Alzoubi and Tariq Shamim and Jorge Alvarado}, title = {Implication of
coughing dynamics on safe social distancing in an indoor environment. A
numerical perspective}, journal = {Building and Environment} }
@article{Chu2021, doi = {10.1038/s41598-021-96870-y}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-96870-y}, year = {2021}, month =
aug, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{11}, number = {1}, author = {Candice P. Chu and Shiguang Liu and
Wenping Song and Ethan Y. Xu and Mary B. Nabity}, title = {Small RNA
sequencing evaluation of renal microRNA biomarkers in dogs with X-linked
hereditary nephropathy}, journal = {Scientific Reports} }
@article{Salem2021, doi = {10.1016/j.isci.2021.102439}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2021.102439}, year = {2021}, month =
may, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {24}, number = {5}, pages =
{102439}, author = {Nihal A. Salem and Amanda H. Mahnke and Kranti
Konganti and Andrew E. Hillhouse and Rajesh C. Miranda}, title =
{Cell-type and fetal-sex-specific targets of prenatal alcohol exposure
in developing mouse cerebral cortex}, journal = {iScience} }
@article{Aviv2021, doi = {10.3390/ijms22179634}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22179634}, year = {2021}, month = sep,
publisher = {MDPI AG}, volume = {22}, number = {17}, pages = {9634},
author = {Moran Aviv and Dana Cohen-Gerassi and Asuka A. Orr and
Rajkumar Misra and Zohar A. Arnon and Linda J. W. Shimon and Yosi
Shacham-Diamand and Phanourios Tamamis and Lihi Adler-Abramovich}, title
= {Modification of a Single Atom Affects the Physical Properties of
Double Fluorinated Fmoc-Phe Derivatives}, journal = {International
Journal of Molecular Sciences} } @article{Taftaf2021, doi =
{10.1038/s41467-021-25189-z}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25189-z}, year = {2021}, month =
aug, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{12}, number = {1}, author = {Rokana Taftaf and Xia Liu and Salendra
Singh and Yuzhi Jia and Nurmaa K. Dashzeveg and Andrew D. Hoffmann and
Lamiaa El-Shennawy and Erika K. Ramos and Valery Adorno-Cruz and Emma J.
Schuster and David Scholten and Dhwani Patel and Youbin Zhang and Andrew
A. Davis and Carolina Reduzzi and Yue Cao and Paolo D'Amico and Yang
Shen and Massimo Cristofanilli and William A. Muller and Vinay Varadan
and Huiping Liu}, title = {ICAM1 initiates CTC cluster formation and
trans-endothelial migration in lung metastasis of breast cancer},
journal = {Nature Communications} } @article{Foquet2021, doi =
{10.1038/s41598-021-91317-w}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91317-w}, year = {2021}, month =
jun, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{11}, number = {1}, author = {Bert Foquet and Adrian A. Castellanos and
Hojun Song}, title = {Comparative analysis of phenotypic plasticity
sheds light on the evolution and molecular underpinnings of locust phase
polyphenism}, journal = {Scientific Reports} } @article{Yan2021, doi =
{10.1038/s41597-021-01010-w}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-021-01010-w}, year = {2021}, month =
sep, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{8}, number = {1}, author = {Yechao Yan and Yangyang Xu and Shuping
Yue}, title = {A high-spatial-resolution dataset of human thermal stress
indices over South and East Asia}, journal = {Scientific Data} }
@article{Arora2021, doi = {10.1038/s41598-021-93796-3}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93796-3}, year = {2021}, month =
jul, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{11}, number = {1}, author = {Akhil Arora and M. M. Faruque Hasan},
title = {Flexible oxygen concentrators for medical applications},
journal = {Scientific Reports} } @article{Grimes2021, doi =
{10.1038/s41598-021-90540-9}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90540-9}, year = {2021}, month =
may, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media {LLC}}, volume =
{11}, number = {1}, author = {C. J. Grimes and L. H. Petersen and A.
Schulze}, title = {Differential gene expression indicates modulated
responses to chronic and intermittent hypoxia in corallivorous fireworms
(Hermodice carunculata)}, journal = {Scientific Reports} }
@article{Orr2021, doi = {10.1021/acsomega.1c00481}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c00481}, year = {2021}, month = may,
publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)}, volume = {6}, number =
{22}, pages = {14090--14103}, author = {Asuka A. Orr and Meichen Wang
and Burcu Beykal and Hari S. Ganesh and Sara E. Hearon and Efstratios N.
Pistikopoulos and Timothy D. Phillips and Phanourios Tamamis}, title =
{Combining Experimental Isotherms, Minimalistic Simulations, and a Model
to Understand and Predict Chemical Adsorption onto Montmorillonite
Clays}, journal = {ACS Omega} } @article{Kim2021, doi =
{10.21037/qims-20-745}, url = {https://doi.org/10.21037/qims-20-745},
year = {2021}, month = may, publisher = {AME Publishing Company}, volume
= {11}, number = {5}, pages = {1763--1781}, author = {Taeouk Kim and
Mohammadali Hedayat and Veronica V. Vaitkus and Marek Belohlavek and
Vinayak Krishnamurthy and Iman Borazjani}, title = {Automatic
segmentation of the left ventricle in echocardiographic images using
convolutional neural networks}, journal = {Quantitative Imaging in
Medicine and Surgery} } @article{Herath2021, doi =
{10.3390/ijms22062837}, url = {https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22062837},
year = {2021}, month = mar, publisher = {MDPI AG}, volume = {22}, number
= {6}, pages = {2837}, author = {Venura Herath and Jeanmarie Verchot},
title = {Transcriptional Regulatory Networks Associate with Early Stages
of Potato Virus X Infection of Solanum tuberosum}, journal =
{International Journal of Molecular Sciences} } @article{Ravirala2021,
doi = {10.1016/j.omto.2021.10.006}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.omto.2021.10.006}, year = {2021}, month =
dec, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {23}, pages = {330--341},
author = {Divya Ravirala and Guangsheng Pei and Zhongming Zhao and
Xiaoliu Zhang}, title = {Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals a strong
connection between Gadd45g upregulation and oncolytic HSV infection in
tumor tissue}, journal = {Molecular Therapy - Oncolytics} }
@article{Morris2022, doi = {10.1128/spectrum.00764-21}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00764-21}, year = {2022}, month = jan,
publisher = {American Society for Microbiology}, author = {Ellen Ruth A.
Morris and Jing Wu and Angela I. Bordin and Sara D. Lawhon and Noah D.
Cohen}, editor = {Cheryl P. Andam}, title = {Differences in the
Accessory Genomes and Methylomes of Strains of Streptococcus equi subsp.
equi and of Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus Obtained from the
Respiratory Tract of Horses from Texas}, journal = {Microbiology
Spectrum} } @article{Bernard2021, doi = {10.1093/texcom/tgab050}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1093/texcom/tgab050}, year = {2021}, month = jan,
publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, volume = {2}, number = {3},
author = {Jessica A Bernard and Hannah K Ballard and Trevor Bryan
Jackson}, title = {Cerebellar Dentate Connectivity across Adulthood: A
Large-Scale Resting State Functional Connectivity Investigation},
journal = {Cerebral Cortex Communications} } @article{Karki2021, doi =
{10.3390/cancers13112682}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112682}, year = {2021}, month = may,
publisher = {MDPI AG}, volume = {13}, number = {11}, pages = {2682},
author = {Keshav Karki and Kumaravel Mohankumar and Abigail Schoeller
and Gregory Martin and Rupesh Shrestha and Stephen Safe}, title = {NR4A1
Ligands as Potent Inhibitors of Breast Cancer Cell and Tumor Growth},
journal = {Cancers} } @article{Lee2016, doi = {10.1105/tpc.16.00408},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.16.00408}, year = {2016}, month =
sep, publisher = {Oxford University Press OUP}, volume = {28}, number =
{9}, pages = {2212--2224}, author = {Jung Ro Lee and Xiaoyuan Xie and
Kailu Yang and Junjie Zhang and Sang Yeol Lee and Dorothy E. Shippen},
title = {Dynamic Interactions of Arabidopsis TEN1: Stabilizing Telomeres
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{https://doi.org/10.1194/jlr.m066381}, year = {2016}, month = apr,
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{650--662}, author = {Danish Khan and Kaitlyn R. McGrath and Oleksandra
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{Structural elements that govern Sec14-like PITP sensitivities to potent
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{Antivirals for allosteric inhibition of Zika virus using a homology
model and experimentally determined structure of envelope protein},
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{10.3390/toxins9120395}, url = {https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins9120395},
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Anthony Guiseppi-Elie}, title = {Molecular Modeling and Simulation Tools
in the Development of Peptide-Based Biosensors for Mycotoxin Detection:
Example of Ochratoxin}, journal = {Toxins} } @article{Mukherjee2017, doi
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Biswas and Andreas Ehnbom and Subrata K Ghosh and Ibrahim El-Zoghbi and
Nattamai Bhuvanesh and Hassan S Bazzi and John A Gladysz}, title =
{Syntheses, structures, and stabilities of aliphatic and aromatic
fluorous iodine(I) and iodine(III) compounds: the role of iodine Lewis
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Anthony Guiseppi-Elie}, title = {Evaluation of Ochratoxin Recognition by
Peptides Using Explicit Solvent Molecular Dynamics}, journal = {Toxins}
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{https://doi.org/10.16966/2575-0305.106}, year = {2018}, publisher =
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{12}, pages = {3849--3856}, author = {Qi Zheng}, title = {rSalvador: An
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publisher = {Oxford University Press (OUP)}, volume = {45}, number =
{18}, pages = {10884--10894}, author = {Kailu Yang and Jeng-Yih Chang
and Zhicheng Cui and Xiaojun Li and Ran Meng and Lijun Duan and Jirapat
Thongchol and Joanita Jakana and Christoph M. Huwe and James C.
Sacchettini and Junjie Zhang}, title = {Structural insights into
species-specific features of the ribosome from the human pathogen
Mycobacterium tuberculosis}, journal = {Nucleic Acids Research} }
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{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00431-9}, year = {2017}, month =
aug, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{8}, number = {1}, author = {Hyun Deog Yoo and Yanliang Liang and Hui
Dong and Junhao Lin and Hua Wang and Yisheng Liu and Lu Ma and Tianpin
Wu and Yifei Li and Qiang Ru and Yan Jing and Qinyou An and Wu Zhou and
Jinghua Guo and Jun Lu and Sokrates T. Pantelides and Xiaofeng Qian and
Yan Yao}, title = {Fast kinetics of magnesium monochloride cations in
interlayer-expanded titanium disulfide for magnesium rechargeable
batteries}, journal = {Nature Communications} } @article{Grabon2017, doi
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{https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m117.791467}, year = 2017, month = sep,
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{14438--14455}, author = {Aby Grabon and A Adam Orłowski and Ashutosh
Tripathi and Joni Vuorio and Matti Javanainen and Tomasz Róg and Max
Lönnfors and Mark I. McDermott and Garland Siebert and Pentti Somerharju
and Ilpo Vattulainen and Vytas A. Bankaitis}, title = {Dynamics and
energetics of the mammalian phosphatidylinositol transfer protein
phospholipid exchange cycle}, journal = {Journal of Biological
Chemistry} } @article{Chen2017, doi = {10.1126/sciadv.aao2710}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aao2710}, year = {2017}, month = nov,
publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS)}, volume = {3}, number = {11}, author = {Di Chen and Nan Li and
Dina Yuryev and J. Kevin Baldwin and Yongqiang Wang and Michael J.
Demkowicz}, title = {Self-organization of helium precipitates into
elongated channels within metal nanolayers}, journal = {Science
Advances} } @article{Fanning2018, doi = {10.7554/elife.37161}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.37161}, year = {2018}, month = nov,
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{Sean W Fanning and Rinath Jeselsohn and Venkatasubramanian Dharmarajan
and Christopher G Mayne and Mostafa Karimi and Gilles Buchwalter and
René Houtman and Weiyi Toy and Colin E Fowler and Ross Han and Muriel
Lainé and Kathryn E Carlson and Teresa A Martin and Jason Nowak and
Jerome C Nwachukwu and David J Hosfield and Sarat Chandarlapaty and Emad
Tajkhorshid and Kendall W Nettles and Patrick R Griffin and Yang Shen
and John A Katzenellenbogen and Myles Brown and Geoffrey L Greene},
title = {The SERM/SERD bazedoxifene disrupts ESR1 helix 12 to overcome
acquired hormone resistance in breast cancer cells}, journal = {eLife} }
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{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-34426-3}, year = {2018}, month =
nov, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{8}, number = {1}, author = {Wei L. Z. Zhao and Konstantin S. Tikhonov
and Alexander M. Finkel'stein}, title = {Flexural phonons in supported
graphene: from pinning to localization}, journal = {Scientific Reports}
} @article{Su2018, doi = {10.1038/s41598-018-23426-y}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-23426-y}, year = {2018}, month =
mar, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{8}, number = {1}, author = {Qing Su and Hepeng Ding and Lloyd Price and
Lin Shao and Jonathan A. Hinks and Graeme Greaves and Stephen E.
Donnelly and Michael J. Demkowicz and Michael Nastasi}, title = {Rapid
and damage-free outgassing of implanted helium from amorphous silicon
oxycarbide}, journal = {Scientific Reports} }
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{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12918-018-0649-8}, year = {2018}, month = dec,
publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume = {12},
number = {S8}, author = {Roozbeh Dehghannasiri and Mohammad Shahrokh
Esfahani and Edward R. Dougherty}, title = {An experimental design
framework for Markovian gene regulatory networks under stationary
control policy}, journal = {BMC Systems Biology} } @article{Li2018, doi
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{https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.8b03146}, year = {2018}, month = oct,
publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)}, volume = {8}, number =
{11}, pages = {10606--10618}, author = {Haixia Li and Jennifer V.
Obligacion and Paul J. Chirik and Michael B. Hall}, title = {Cobalt
Pincer Complexes in Catalytic C-H Borylation: The Pincer Ligand Flips
Rather Than Dearomatizes}, journal = {ACS Catalysis} }
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{https://doi.org/10.3390/mi9100479}, year = {2018}, month = sep,
publisher = {MDPI AG}, volume = {9}, number = {10}, pages = {479},
author = {Way Cheng and Celal Erbay and Reza Sadr and Arum Han}, title =
{Dynamic Flow Characteristics and Design Principles of Laminar Flow
Microbial Fuel Cells}, journal = {Micromachines} } @article{Leon2018,
doi = {10.1128/aem.02829-17}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.02829-17}, year = {2018}, month = jul,
publisher = {American Society for Microbiology}, volume = {84}, number =
{13}, author = {I. M. Leon and S. D. Lawhon and K. N. Norman and D. S.
Threadgill and N. Ohta and J. Vinasco and H. M. Scott}, editor = {Eric
V. Stabb}, title = {Serotype Diversity and Antimicrobial Resistance
among Salmonella enterica Isolates from Patients at an Equine Referral
Hospital}, journal = {Applied and Environmental Microbiology} }
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{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.taap.2018.05.033}, year = {2018}, month =
aug, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {352}, pages = {142--152},
author = {Chimeddulam Dalaijamts and Joseph A. Cichocki and Yu-Syuan Luo
and Ivan Rusyn and Weihsueh A. Chiu}, title = {Incorporation of the
glutathione conjugation pathway in an updated physiologically-based
pharmacokinetic model for perchloroethylene in mice}, journal =
{Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology} } @article{Nsouglo2018, doi =
{10.1098/rspa.2017.0575}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2017.0575}, year = {2018}, month = mar,
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porosity trigger regular necking patterns at high strain rates}, journal
= {Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and
Engineering Sciences} } @article{Orr2018, doi =
{10.1016/j.compchemeng.2018.02.013}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compchemeng.2018.02.013}, year = {2018},
month = aug, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {116}, pages =
{322--332}, author = {Asuka A. Orr and Hamed Shaykhalishahi and Ewa A.
Mirecka and Sai Vamshi R. Jonnalagadda and Wolfgang Hoyer and Phanourios
Tamamis}, title = {Elucidating the multi-targeted anti-amyloid activity
and enhanced islet amyloid polypeptide binding of β-wrapins}, journal =
{Computers & Chemical Engineering} } @article{Pries2018, doi =
{10.1016/j.chembiol.2017.12.007}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2017.12.007}, year = {2018}, month =
mar, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages =
{279--290.e7}, author = {Verena Pries and Christina Nöcker and Danish
Khan and Philipp Johnen and Zebin Hong and Ashutosh Tripathi and
Anna-Lena Keller and Michael Fitz and Francesca Perruccio and Ireos
Filipuzzi and Sasikala Thavam and Thomas Aust and Ralph Riedl and Slava
Ziegler and Fulvia Bono and Gabriel Schaaf and Vytas A. Bankaitis and
Herbert Waldmann and Dominic Hoepfner}, title = {Target Identification
and Mechanism of Action of Picolinamide and Benzamide Chemotypes with
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{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compchemeng.2018.02.017}, year = {2018},
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{488--502}, author = {Burcu Beykal and Fani Boukouvala and Christodoulos
A. Floudas and Efstratios N. Pistikopoulos}, title = {Optimal design of
energy systems using constrained grey-box multi-objective optimization},
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Insights from Molecular Dynamics Simulations"}, journal = {Journal of
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Baoyu Zhao and Jie Shi and Nowlan Savage and Qingliang Shen and James
Byrnes and Lin Yang and Wonmuk Hwang and Pingwei Li}, title = {Molecular
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} @article{Kokotidou2019, doi = {10.3390/biom10010007}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10010007}, year = {2019}, month = dec,
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and George Vrentzos and Androniki Kretsovali and Phanourios Tamamis and
Anna Mitraki}, title = {Designer Amyloid Cell-Penetrating Peptides for
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Vitha and Holly Gibbs and Kehua Wang and Sakiko Okumoto}, title =
{Broad-Spectrum Amino Acid Transporters ClAAP3 and ClAAP6 Expressed in
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Sciences} } @inproceedings{7966097, author={Jin, Yingyezhe and Li,
Peng}, booktitle={2017 International Joint Conference on Neural Networks
(IJCNN)}, title={Calcium-modulated supervised spike-timing-dependent
plasticity for readout training and sparsification of the liquid state
machine}, year={2017}, volume={}, number={}, pages={2007-2014},
doi={10.1109/IJCNN.2017.7966097} } @article{VERDONKIDD2017123, title =
{A comparative study of historical droughts over Texas, USA and
Murray-Darling Basin, Australia: Factors influencing initialization and
cessation}, journal = {Global and Planetary Change}, volume = {149},
pages = {123-138}, year = {2017}, issn = {0921-8181}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2017.01.001}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818116301382},
author = {Danielle C. Verdon-Kidd and Bridget R. Scanlon and Tong Ren
and D. Nelun Fernando}, keywords = {Drought, Texas, Murray Darling
Basin, El Nino/Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Pacific Decadal Oscillation
(PDO), Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO), Atlantic Multidecadal
Oscillation (AMO), Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD)}, }
@article{SOLEYMANIHA2016166, title = {Design of a heated
micro-cantilever optimized for thermo-capillary driven printing of
molten polymer nanostructures}, journal = {International Journal of Heat
and Mass Transfer}, volume = {101}, pages = {166-174}, year = {2016},
issn = {0017-9310}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2016.04.063}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0017931016302733},
author = {Mohammadreza Soleymaniha and Jonathan R. Felts}, keywords =
{Atomic force microscope (AFM), Micro-cantilever, Microchannel,
Thermocapillary flow, Thermal dip-pen nanolithography (tDPN), Polymer
nanostructure}, } @article {
IstheAwarenessoftheAerosolStateUsefulinPredictingEnhancedLightningforLightningProducingStormsoverNorthernAlabama,
author = {Tong Ren and Anita D. Rapp and Shaima L. Nasiri and John R.
Mecikalski and Jason Apke}, title = "Is the Awareness of the Aerosol
State Useful in Predicting Enhanced Lightning for Lightning-Producing
Storms over Northern Alabama?", journal = "Journal of Applied
Meteorology and Climatology", year = "2018", publisher = "American
Meteorological Society", address = "Boston MA, USA", volume = "57",
number = "8", doi = "10.1175/JAMC-D-17-0182.1", pages= "1663 - 1681",
url =
"https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/apme/57/8/jamc-d-17-0182.1.xml"
} @article{TENG20181791, title = {Effect of Methylation on Local
Mechanics and Hydration Structure of DNA}, journal = {Biophysical
Journal}, volume = {114}, number = {8}, pages = {1791-1803}, year =
{2018}, issn = {0006-3495}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2018.03.022}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006349518303898},
author = {Xiaojing Teng and Wonmuk Hwang}, abstract = {Cytosine
methylation affects mechanical properties of DNA and potentially alters
the hydration fingerprint for recognition by proteins. The atomistic
origin for these effects is not well understood, and we address this via
all-atom molecular dynamics simulations. We find that the stiffness of
the methylated dinucleotide step changes marginally, whereas the
neighboring steps become stiffer. Stiffening is further enhanced for
consecutively methylated steps, providing a mechanistic origin for the
effect of hypermethylation. Steric interactions between the added methyl
groups and the nonpolar groups of the neighboring nucleotides are
responsible for the stiffening in most cases. By constructing hydration
maps, we found that methylation also alters the surface hydration
structure in distinct ways. Its resistance to deformation may contribute
to the stiffening of DNA for deformational modes lacking steric
interactions. These results highlight the sequence- and
deformational-mode-dependent effects of cytosine methylation.} }
@article { ForcingoftheUpperTroposphericMonsoonAnticyclones, author =
{Leong Wai Siu and Kenneth P. Bowman}, title = "Forcing of the
Upper-Tropospheric Monsoon Anticyclones", journal = "Journal of the
Atmospheric Sciences", year = "2019", publisher = "American
Meteorological Society", address = "Boston MA, USA", volume = "76",
number = "7", doi = "10.1175/JAS-D-18-0340.1", pages= "1937 - 1954", url
=
"https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/atsc/76/7/jas-d-18-0340.1.xml"
} @article{REN2020106694, title = {Improved δ-Eddington approximation
for optically thin clouds}, journal = {Journal of Quantitative
Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {240}, pages = {106694},
year = {2020}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2019.106694}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407319304212},
author = {Tong Ren and Ping Yang and Guanglin Tang and Xianglei Huang
and Eli Mlawer}, keywords = {-Eddington approximation, Forward fraction
of scattering, The asymmetry factor}, abstract = {The δ-Eddington
simulations of broadband shortwave net radiation fluxes at the top of
the atmosphere (FTOA) and the surface (FSURF) are evaluated with
different parameterizations of the forward fraction of scattering (f),
including the square of the asymmetry factor (f = g2), the fraction of
the forward single-scattered intensity over the total single-scattered
intensity (f = fp), and the cube of the asymmetry factor
(f = g3). g2 and g3 are respectively the 2nd and 3rd moments of the
Henyey–Greenstein (HG) phase function and hence approximate measures of
the variance and skewness of the phase function. The factor fp for
spherical droplets is estimated using a truncation angle, which
separates the forward peak and diffusive portions of a highly
anisotropic phase function. The results show that the simulations of
FTOA and FSURF are not improved, if the conventional approach f = g2 is
replaced by f = fp in the δ-Eddington approximation for an
atmosphere in the presence of liquid clouds. For the optically thick
conditions, multiple scattering plays a dominant role in determining the
reflectance (R) and transmittance (T) of the cloudy layer; the
conventional parameterization f = g2 is most accurate among the three
parameterizations. For the optically thin conditions, single scattering
dominates over multiple scattering and thus f = g2 results in biased
FTOA and FSURF calculations, particularly with low solar elevations. For
such cases, f = g3 shows most accurate FTOA and FSURF results for both
liquid and ice clouds, though f = g3 also results in smaller cloud layer
heating rates in general.} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD031544, author = {Ren, Tong and
Rapp, Anita D. and Mecikalski, John R. and Apke, Jason}, title =
{Lightning and Associated Convection Features in the Presence of
Absorbing Aerosols Over Northern Alabama}, journal = {Journal of
Geophysical Research: Atmospheres}, volume = {124}, number = {23}, pages
= {13375-13396}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD031544}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2019JD031544},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2019JD031544},
abstract = {Abstract Many of the previous aerosol-convection/lightning
enhancement studies are based on convective storms that occur in the
presence of absorbing aerosols; such aerosols may impact deep convection
through their microphysical and radiative effects. In this study,
lightning flash rates (FRs) are analyzed together with aerosol optical
depth (AOD) retrievals from the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer for summer storms during 2002–2015. Aerosol index
retrievals from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument are used to separate
nonabsorbing and absorbing aerosol cases. Statistical analyses are
performed to test for significant sample differences and linear
relationships between the AOD of case studies and the FRs, convective
available potential energy, planetary boundary layer height, and
low-level vertical wind shear to identify if evidence of regulation of
storms by absorbing aerosols exists. Overall, AOD and FR do not show any
significant linear relationship. When just observing absorbing aerosols,
however, AOD and FR show a stronger (but still very weak) positive
correlation. The weak correlation may be related to the absorbing
aerosols' impact on convective available potential energy, which has a
moderate linear correlation to AOD particularly when the instability is
low, which implies some kind of convection or convective environment
modification by absorbing aerosols. Although the planetary boundary
layer height tends to decrease with increasing amount of absorbing
aerosols, it is found that low-level vertical wind shear does not
correlate with AOD for either absorbing or nonabsorbing aerosols. This
result suggests little influence of the interaction between absorbing
aerosols and turbulent mixing on storms.}, year = {2019} }
@article{PhysRevLett.124.180601, title = {Operator L'evy Flight: Light
Cones in Chaotic Long-Range Interacting Systems}, author = {Zhou, Tianci
and Xu, Shenglong and Chen, Xiao and Guo, Andrew and Swingle, Brian},
journal = {Phys. Rev. Lett.}, volume = {124}, issue = {18}, pages =
{180601}, numpages = {6}, year = {2020}, month = {May}, publisher =
{American Physical Society}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.180601}, url
= {https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.180601} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL087776, author = {Arcomano, Troy
and Szunyogh, Istvan and Pathak, Jaideep and Wikner, Alexander and Hunt,
Brian R. and Ott, Edward}, title = {A Machine Learning-Based Global
Atmospheric Forecast Model}, journal = {Geophysical Research Letters},
volume = {47}, number = {9}, pages = {e2020GL087776}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL087776}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2020GL087776},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2020GL087776},
note = {e2020GL087776 10.1029/2020GL087776}, abstract = {Abstract The
paper investigates the applicability of machine learning (ML) to weather
prediction by building a reservoir computing-based, low-resolution,
global prediction model. The model is designed to take advantage of the
massively parallel architecture of a modern supercomputer. The forecast
performance of the model is assessed by comparing it to that of daily
climatology, persistence, and a numerical (physics-based) model of
identical prognostic state variables and resolution. Hourly resolution
20-day forecasts with the model predict realistic values of the
atmospheric state variables at all forecast times for the entire globe.
The ML model outperforms both climatology and persistence for the first
three forecast days in the midlatitudes, but not in the tropics.
Compared to the numerical model, the ML model performs best for the
state variables most affected by parameterized processes in the
numerical model.}, year = {2020} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1111/vde.12885, author = {Older, Caitlin E.
and Diesel, Alison B. and Starks, Jill M. and Lawhon, Sara D. and
Rodrigues Hoffmann, Aline}, title = {Characterization of staphylococcal
communities on healthy and allergic feline skin}, journal = {Veterinary
Dermatology}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {61-e10}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1111/vde.12885}, url =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/vde.12885}, eprint =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/vde.12885}, abstract =
{Various Staphylococcus species have been demonstrated to play important
roles on the skin, including causing disease and protecting the host
from pathogens. Although culture-based studies have isolated various
Staphylococcus spp. from feline skin, very little is known regarding the
species-level communities on the host. To describe the species-level
staphylococcal communities inhabiting the skin of healthy cats and cats
with allergic dermatitis. Skin swabs from the ear canal and groin of 11
healthy and 10 allergic (nonlesional) cats were obtained. DNA was
extracted from the skin swabs and used for next-generation sequencing
targeting the V1–3 region of the 16S rRNA gene. Following a standard
microbiota analysis of the sequencing data, species-level assignment for
the staphylococcal sequences were obtained using a staphylococci-specific
database. Staphylococcus spp. had similar relative abundance in healthy
and allergic samples. The most abundant staphylococcal species were S.
epidermidis in healthy samples, and S. felis and S. capitis in allergic
samples. The composition of staphylococcal communities, as well as
relative abundance of Staphylococcus spp., was variable between body
sites and individual cats sampled. These results demonstrate that
diverse staphylococcal communities inhabit the skin of healthy and
allergic cats, and provide a starting point for further research into
the importance of Staphylococcus spp. in feline allergic skin disease.},
year = {2021} } @Article{pathogens9080638, AUTHOR = {Older, Caitlin E.
and Rodrigues Hoffmann, Aline and Hoover, Kathleen and Banovic, Frane},
TITLE = {Characterization of Cutaneous Bacterial Microbiota from
Superficial Pyoderma Forms in Atopic Dogs}, JOURNAL = {Pathogens},
VOLUME = {9}, YEAR = {2020}, NUMBER = {8}, ARTICLE-NUMBER = {638}, URL =
{https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0817/9/8/638}, PubMedID = {32781634}, pages =
{1-12}, ISSN = {2076-0817}, ABSTRACT = {Although Staphylococcus
pseudintermedius is considered the major pathogen associated with
superficial canine pyoderma, no study has investigated the entire
bacterial community in these lesions with molecular techniques. The
objectives of this study were to characterize the bacterial microbiota
in two forms of superficial canine pyoderma lesions, superficial
bacterial folliculitis (SBF) and epidermal collarette (EC), especially
in terms of the staphylococcal community. Swabs from 12 SBF and 9 EC
lesions were obtained from eight and six atopic dogs, respectively.
Eight samples from the axilla and groin of four healthy dogs served as
controls. DNA was extracted for 16S rRNA gene sequencing and
quantitative polymerase chain reaction of Staphylococcus spp. and S.
pseudintermedius. Healthy skin samples harbored significantly more
diverse bacterial communities than pyoderma samples. Healthy samples had
communities that were more similar to each other, and were distinct from
pyoderma samples. Staphylococcus spp. abundance was increased in
pyoderma samples, especially those from EC samples. Although determining
species-level identities of staphylococcal sequences revealed many
species, S. pseudintermedius was the primary staphylococcal species
found in all sample types. As expected, there are many differences in
the microbiota when comparing healthy and canine pyoderma lesions
samples. These lesions do not seem to be associated with a change in the
relative abundance of specific Staphylococcus species, but simply an
overall increase in Staphylococcus spp. abundance. The results of this
study provide a starting point for future studies investigating how
antimicrobial treatments may further change the microbiota associated
with these lesions.}, DOI = {10.3390/pathogens9080638} }
@Article{pathogens9050383, AUTHOR = {Older, Caitlin E. and Gomes, Márcia
de Oliveira Sampaio and Hoffmann, Aline Rodrigues and Policano, Mariel
Dalmédico and Reis, Camila Aparecida Cruz dos and Carregaro, Adriano
Bonfim and Ambrósio, Carlos Eduardo and Carregaro, Valéria Maria Lara},
TITLE = {Influence of the FIV Status and Chronic Gingivitis on Feline
Oral Microbiota}, JOURNAL = {Pathogens}, VOLUME = {9}, YEAR = {2020},
pages = {1-11}, NUMBER = {5}, ARTICLE-NUMBER = {383}, URL =
{https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0817/9/5/383}, PubMedID = {32429494}, ISSN =
{2076-0817}, ABSTRACT = {Feline chronic gingivostomatitis (FCGS) has an
unclear pathogenesis with the oral microbiome and viral infections, such
as feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), thought to contribute. Although
the relationship between the FIV status and FCGS is not clear, one
theory is FIV-induced immune dysregulation could contribute to oral
dysbiosis, promoting FCGS development. To further understand the
relationship between FCGS, FIV infection, and the oral microbiome, oral
cavities of forty cats fitting within 4 groups (FIV- without gingivitis,
FIV+ without gingivitis, FIV- with gingivitis, FIV+ with gingivitis)
were swabbed. Next generation sequencing targeting the V4 region of the
16s rRNA gene was performed for bacterial community profiling. No
differences in diversity were observed, however, analysis of the data in
terms of gingivitis revealed differences in the relative abundance of
taxa and predicted functional output. Odoribacter spp., a bacteria
associated with oral disease, was found in higher relative abundances in
cats with the highest gingivitis grade. Cats with gingivitis were also
found to harbor communities more involved in production of short-chain
fatty acids, which have been connected with oral disease. Significant
findings associated with the FIV status were few and of low impact,
suggesting any connection between the FIV status and FCGS is likely not
related to the oral microbiota.}, DOI = {10.3390/pathogens9050383} }
@article{10.1371/journal.pone.0220463, doi =
{10.1371/journal.pone.0220463}, author = {Older, Caitlin E. AND Diesel,
Alison B. AND Lawhon, Sara D. AND Queiroz, Cintia R. R. AND Henker, Luan
C. AND Rodrigues Hoffmann, Aline}, journal = {PLOS ONE}, publisher =
{Public Library of Science}, title = {The feline cutaneous and oral
microbiota are influenced by breed and environment}, year = {2019},
month = {07}, volume = {14}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220463}, pages = {1-19}, abstract
= {Previous research revealed the feline skin bacterial microbiota to be
site-specific and the fungal microbiota to be individual-specific. The
effect of other factors, such as genotype and environment, have not yet
been studied in cats, but have been shown to be potentially important in
shaping the cutaneous microbiota of other animals. Therefore, the
objectives of this study were to evaluate the effect of these factors on
the bacterial and fungal microbiota of feline skin and oral cavity. The
influence of genotype was assessed through the analysis of different cat
breeds, and the influence of environment through comparison of indoor
and outdoor cats. DNA was extracted from skin and oral swabs, and
bacterial and fungal next-generation sequencing were performed. Analysis
of the skin microbiota of different cat breeds revealed significant
differences in alpha diversity, with Sphynx and Bengal cats having the
most diverse communities. Many taxa were found to be differentially
abundant between cat breeds, including Veillonellaceae and Malassezia
spp. Outdoor environment exposure had considerable influence on beta
diversity, especially in the oral cavity, and resulted in numerous
differentially abundant taxa. Our findings indicate that the oral
bacterial microbiota and both fungal and bacterial microbiota of feline
skin are influenced by breed, and to a lesser degree, environment.},
number = {7}, } @article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JD032591, author =
{Ren, Tong and Yang, Ping and Schumacher, Courtney and Huang, Xianglei
and Lin, Wuyin}, title = {Impact of Cloud Longwave Scattering on
Radiative Fluxes Associated With the Madden-Julian Oscillation in the
Indian Ocean and Maritime Continent}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical
Research: Atmospheres}, volume = {125}, number = {13}, pages =
{e2020JD032591}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JD032591}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2020JD032591},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2020JD032591},
note = {e2020JD032591 2020JD032591}, abstract = {Abstract Previous
studies suggested that cloud longwave radiation contributes to the
development and maintenance of the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) and
model-based convection is highly sensitive to the radiation scheme.
However, currently used radiation schemes do not take cloud longwave
scattering into account, resulting in an overestimation of the outgoing
longwave radiation (OLR) and an underestimation of the downward longwave
flux at the surface. We use combined active and passive satellite cloud
property retrievals to quantify the one-layer cloud OLR and heating rate
(HR) biases introduced by neglecting cloud longwave scattering in the
Indian Ocean and Maritime Continent in the context of MJO, with a focus
on its phases 3, 5, and 6. The results show that the satellite-detected
one-layer cloud area consists primarily of ice clouds, particularly
during the boreal winter in the 4-year study period. An increased ice
cloud area fraction of one-layer cloud groups is present up to
5 days before the onset of MJO events. If longwave scattering is
neglected, the composite mean OLR overestimation over the one-layer ice
cloud area from 5 days before to 4 days after the MJO passage
is approximately 3.5 to 5.0 W m−2. Neglecting longwave
scattering also leads to a HR underestimation at cloud base and an
overestimation at cloud top, making the base-to-top heating gradient
less sharp at the cloud-resolving scale.}, year = {2020} }
@article{doi:10.1080/02786826.2017.1322174, author = {Huan Li and
William B. Faulkner and John S. Haglund and Ronald E. Lacey}, title =
{Effect of convergence angle on impactor performance}, journal =
{Aerosol Science and Technology}, volume = {51}, number = {8}, pages =
{981-987}, year = {2017}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, doi =
{10.1080/02786826.2017.1322174}, URL =
{https://doi.org/10.1080/02786826.2017.1322174}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1080/02786826.2017.1322174} }
@article{guerrero_raw_2021, title = {Raw pacific biosciences and
illumina sequencing reads and assembled genome data for the cattle ticks
Rhipicephalus microplus and Rhipicephalus annulatus}, volume = {35},
issn = {2352-3409}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340921001360},
doi = {10.1016/j.dib.2021.106852}, abstract = {Ticks from the genus
Rhipicephalus have enormous global economic impact as ectoparasites of
cattle. Rhipicephalus microplus and Rhipicephalus annulatus are known to
harbor infectious pathogens such as Babesia bovis, Babesia bigemina, and
Anaplasma marginale. Having reference quality genomes of these ticks
would advance research to identify druggable targets for chemical
entities with acaricidal activity and refine anti-tick vaccine
approaches. We sequenced and assembled the genomes of R. microplus and
R. annulatus, using Pacific Biosciences and HiSeq 4000 technologies on
very high molecular weight genomic DNA. We used 22 and 29 SMRT cells on
the Pacific Biosciences Sequel for R. microplus and R. annulatus,
respectively, and 3 lanes of the Illumina HiSeq 4000 platform for each
tick. The PacBio sequence yields for R. microplus and R. annulatus were
21.0 and 27.9 million subreads, respectively, which were assembled with
Canu v. 1.7. The final Canu assemblies consisted of 92,167 and 57,796
contigs with an average contig length of 39,249 and 69,055 bp for R.
microplus and R. annulatus, respectively. Annotated genome quality was
assessed by BUSCO analysis to provide quantitative measures for each
assembled genome. Over 82\% and 92\% of the 1066 member BUSCO gene set
was found in the assembled genomes of R. microplus and R. annulatus,
respectively. For R. microplus, only 189 of the 1066 BUSCO genes were
missing and only 140 were present in a fragmented condition. For R.
annulatus, only 75 of the BUSCO genes were missing and only 109 were
present in a fragmented condition. The raw sequencing reads and the
assembled contigs/scaffolds are archived at the National Center for
Biotechnology Information.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-05-06},
journal = {Data in Brief}, author = {Guerrero, Felix D. and Ghaffari,
Noushin and Bendele, Kylie G. and Metz, Richard P. and Dickens, C.
Michael and Blood, Philip D. and Tidwell, Jason and Miller, Robert J.
and de León, Adalberto A. Pérez and Teel, Pete D. and Johnson, Charles
D.}, month = apr, year = {2021}, keywords = {Canu assembler, Cattle
tick, Large genome assembly, PacBio genome sequencing, Rhipicephalus
annulatus, Rhipicephalus microplus}, pages = {106852}, file =
{ScienceDirect Full Text
PDF:/home/cmdickens/Zotero/storage/RWIDP3Q3/Guerrero et al. - 2021 - Raw
pacific biosciences and illumina sequencing
re.pdf:application/pdf;ScienceDirect
Snapshot:/home/cmdickens/Zotero/storage/F5XG6RYB/S2352340921001360.html:text/html},
} @article{couperthwaite_materials_2020, title = {Materials Design
Through Batch Bayesian Optimization with Multisource Information
Fusion}, volume = {72}, issn = {1543-1851}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-020-04396-x}, doi =
{10.1007/s11837-020-04396-x}, abstract = {Integrated computational
materials engineering (ICME) calls for the integration of simulation
tools and experiments to accelerate the development of materials. ICME
approaches tend to be computationally costly, and recently, Bayesian
optimization (BO) has been proposed as a way to make ICME more resource
efficient. Conventional BO, however, is sequential (i.e., one-at-a-time)
in nature, which makes it very time-consuming when the evaluation of a
materials design choice is costly. While conventional high-throughput
approaches enable the synthesis and characterization (or simulation) of
materials in a parallel manner, they tend to be “open loop” and are
unable to provide recommendations of what to try next once the parallel
experiment/simulation has been carried out and analyzed. Here, we
address this problem by introducing a batch BO framework that enables
the exploration of the material’s design space in a parallel fashion. We
augment this approach by incorporating information fusion frameworks
capable of integrating multiple information sources. Demonstrating the
proposed approach in the computational design of dual-phase steel, we
show that batch BO can result in a significant reduction in the time and
resources needed to carry out the design task. The proposed approach has
wider applicability, well beyond the ICME example used to demonstrate
it.}, language = {en}, number = {12}, urldate = {2021-05-06}, journal =
{JOM}, author = {Couperthwaite, Richard and Molkeri, Abhilash and
Khatamsaz, Danial and Srivastava, Ankit and Allaire, Douglas and
Arròyave, Raymundo}, month = dec, year = {2020}, pages = {4431-4443},
file = {Springer Full Text
PDF:/home/cmdickens/Zotero/storage/WSAH4IEZ/Couperthwaite et al. - 2020
- Materials Design Through Batch Bayesian
Optimizati.pdf:application/pdf}, }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.13238, author = {Raszick, Tyler J.
and Dickens, C. Michael and Perkin, Lindsey C. and Tessnow, Ashley E.
and Suh, Charles P.-C. and Ruiz-Arce, Raul and Boratynski, Theodore N.
and Falco, Marcelo R. and Johnston, J. Spencer and Sword, Gregory A.},
title = {Population genomics and phylogeography of the boll weevil,
Anthonomus grandis Boheman (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), in the United
States, northern Mexico, and Argentina}, journal = {Evolutionary
Applications}, volume = {n/a}, number = {n/a}, pages = {1-16}, keywords
= {boll weevil, ddRADseq, phylogenetics, phylogeography, population
genetics, population genomics}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.13238}, url =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/eva.13238}, eprint =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/eva.13238}, abstract =
{Abstract The boll weevil, Anthonomus grandis Boheman (Coleoptera:
Curculionidae), is an important pest of commercial cotton across the
Americas. In the United States, eradication of this species is
complicated by re-infestations of areas where eradication has been
previously successful and by the existence of morphologically similar
variants that can confound identification efforts. To date, no study has
applied a high-throughput sequencing approach to better understand the
population genetic structure of the boll weevil. Furthermore, only a
single study has investigated genetic relationships between populations
in North and South America. We used double digest restriction
site-associated DNA sequencing (ddRADseq) to resolve the population
genomic structure of the boll weevil in the southern United States,
northern Mexico, and Argentina. Additionally, we assembled the first
complete mitochondrial genome for this species and generated a
preliminary whole genome assembly, both of which were used to improve
the identification of informative loci. Downstream analyses revealed two
main lineages—one consisting of populations found geographically west of
the Sierra Madre Occidental mountain range and the second consisting of
populations found to the east—were revealed, and both were
sub-structured. Population geographic structure was consistent with the
isolation by distance model, indicating that geogrpahic distance is
likely a primary mechanism driving divergence in this species. Boll
weevil populations from Argentina were found to be more closely related
to the eastern lineage, suggesting a recent colonization of South
America by the eastern lineage, but additional sampling across Mexico,
Central America and South America is needed to further clarify their
origin. Finally, we uncovered an instance of population turnover or
replacement, highlighting the temporal instability of population
structure.}, year = {2021}, } @article{https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.5518,
author = {Raszick, Tyler J and Suh, Charles P-C and Dickens, Charles
Michael and Sword, Gregory A}, title = {Genome-wide markers reveal
temporal instability of local population genetic structure in the cotton
fleahopper, Pseudatomoscelis seriatus (Hemiptera: Miridae)}, journal =
{Pest Management Science}, volume = {76}, number = {1}, pages =
{324-332}, keywords = {cotton fleahopper, population genomics,
resistance management, refuge}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.5518},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ps.5518}, eprint
= {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ps.5518}, abstract =
{Abstract BACKGROUND The cotton fleahopper, Pseudatomoscelis seriatus
(Reuter) (Hemiptera: Miridae), is a pest of upland cotton, Gossypium
hirsutum L. (Malvales: Malvaceae), that attacks pre-floral buds
(squares), leading to abscission and yield losses. In the Brazos Valley
cotton production area of Texas (USA), P. seriatus exhibits a seasonal
pattern of host use. In spring, eggs hatch from stems of the
overwintering host, woolly croton, Croton capitatus Michx.
(Malpighiales: Euphorbiaceae). During the growing season, individuals
feed on a variety of host plants, including cotton. Adults return to
woolly croton at season end to oviposit. We investigated if genetic
differentiation exists between populations infesting cotton and those
infesting alternative hosts, and whether woolly croton serves as a
year-end site of admixture that could be suitable as a natural refuge
for the purposes of insect resistance management. We combined
high-throughput DNA sequencing with fine-scale spatio-temporal sampling
to test (i) whether a population genomic approach would recover patterns
of genetic variation consistent with earlier studies and (ii) if local
genetic population structure was robust to seasonal changes in local
habitat over time. RESULTS We found high gene flow among populations of
P. seriatus collected from different host plants in the Brazos Valley.
We also identified temporal instability of the local population genetic
structure, including the near complete loss of a genotypic group that
had been previously abundant. CONCLUSION We support the status of woolly
croton as a natural refuge that promotes year-end gene flow between
genotypes infesting cotton and those infesting alternative hosts. © 2019
Society of Chemical Industry}, year = {2020} } @article {Wahl617241,
author = {Wahl, Nancy J. and Murray, Seth C. and Zhang, Hong-Bin and
Zhang, Meiping and Dickens, C. Michael and Isakeit, Thomas S.}, title =
{Maize Kernel Development Stage the Primary Factor in Differential Gene
Expression in Response to Two Methods of Field Inoculation with
Aspergillus flavus}, elocation-id = {617241}, year = {2019}, pages =
{1-47}, doi = {10.1101/617241}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory}, abstract = {Background Aflatoxins, produced by the fungus
Aspergillus flavus, often contaminate preharvest maize (Zea mays L.)
grain under heat and drought stresses, posing serious health hazards to
humans and livestock, and resulting in significant costs to identify and
dispose of contaminated grain. This study was designed to investigate
the changes in differential gene expression during seed morphogenesis
and maturation in the {\textquotedblleft}aflatoxin
resistant{\textquotedblright} Argentinian inbred line Tx772 when
challenged by the introduction of A. flavus through two different
methods of ear inoculation; non-wounding (silk channel, used to select
Tx772), wounding (side needle) and a non-inoculated control.Method and
Findings Grain maturity had the largest effect on overall RNA-Seq
differential gene expression (DGE) as measured by edgeR of the
Bioconductor platform. However, within each stage of development,
ranging from blister to dent, similar up-regulation in expression of
many maize genes following inoculation with either method was observed;
a total of 16 genes previously associated with resistance to pathogens
were identified among the transcripts differentially expressed (DE) at p
<= .05, FDR <= .10, and fold change >= 2.0 over all stages. The
side needle technique produced a larger effect of infection as evidenced
by 6,324 fungal reads versus 518 in silk channel and a higher level of
aflatoxin. Correlations between approximately 7,000 fungal reads and the
number of maize DE genes for each of the eight treatment groups was 0.56
(p = .152) and was 0.65 (p < .001) with levels of aflatoxin ranging
from 0 to 137 ng g-1.Conclusion These correlations provided an internal
measure of effectiveness of inoculation methods that were associated
with the mostly up-regulation of defense-related genes in response to
the presence of Aspergillus flavus in a unique maize genetic
background.}, url =
{https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/05/09/617241}, eprint =
{https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/05/09/617241.full.pdf},
journal = {bioRxiv} } @article{10.1115/1.4041123, author = {Wu,
Tingcheng and San Andrés, Luis}, title = "{Leakage and Dynamic Force
Coefficients for Two Labyrinth Gas Seals: Teeth-on-Stator and
Interlocking Teeth Configurations. A Computational Fluid Dynamics
Approach to Their Performance}", journal = {Journal of Engineering for
Gas Turbines and Power}, volume = {141}, number = {4}, pages = {1-12},
year = {2018}, month = {10}, abstract = "{Labyrinth gas seals (LSs)
commonly used in turbomachines reduce secondary flow leakage.
Conventional see-through labyrinth seal designs include either all
teeth-on-stator (TOS) or all teeth-on-rotor (TOR). Experience shows that
an interlocking labyrinth seal (ILS), with teeth on both stator and
rotor, reduces gas leakage by up to 30\\% compared to the conventional
see-through designs. However, field data for ILS rotordynamic
characteristics are still vague and scarce in the literature. This work
presents flow predictions for an ILS and a TOS LS, both seals share
identical design features, namely radial clearance
Cr = 0.2 mm, rotor diameter
D = 150 mm, tooth pitch
Li = 3.75 mm, and tooth height
B = 3 mm. Air enters the seal at supply pressure
Pin = 3.8, 6.9 bar (absolute) and temperature of
25 °C. The ratio of gas exit pressure to supply pressure ranges
from 0.5 to 0.8, and the rotor speed is fixed at 10 krpm (surface speed
of 79 m/s). The analysis implements a computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
method with a multi-frequency-orbit rotor whirl model. The CFD predicted
mass flow rate for the ILS is ∼ 21\\% lower than that of the TOS
LS, thus making the ILS a more efficient choice. Integration of the
dynamic pressure fields in the seal cavities, obtained for excitation
frequency (ω) ranging from 12\\% to 168\\% of rotor speed (sub and super
synchronous whirl), allows an accurate estimation of the seal dynamic
force coefficients. For all the considered operating conditions, at low
frequency range, the TOS LS shows a negative direct stiffness (K <
0), frequency independent; whereas the ILS has K > 0
that increases with both frequency and supply pressure. For both seals,
the magnitude of K decreases when the exit pressure/inlet pressure ratio
increases. On the other hand, the cross-coupled stiffness (k) from both
seals is frequency dependent, its magnitude increases with gas supply
pressure, and k for the ILS is more sensitive to a change in the
exit/inlet pressure ratio. Notably, k turns negative for subsynchronous
frequencies below rotor speed (Ω) for both the TOS LS and the ILS. The
direct damping (C) for the TOS LS remains constant for
ω > ½ Ω and has a larger magnitude than the damping for
the ILS over the frequency range up to 1.5 Ω. An increase in exit/inlet
pressure ratio decreases the direct damping for both seals. The
effective damping coefficient, Ceff = (C-k/ω), whenever
positive aids to damp vibrations, whereas Ceff < 0 is a
potential source for an instability. For frequencies
ω/Ω < 1.3, Ceff for the TOS LS is higher in magnitude
than that for the ILS. From a rotordynamics point of view, the ILS is
not a sound selection albeit it reduces leakage. Comparison of the CFD
predicted force coefficients against those from a bulk flow model
demonstrates that the later simple model delivers poor results, often
contradictory and largely indifferent to the type of seal, ILS or TOS
LS. In addition, CFD model predictions are benchmarked against
experimental dynamic force coefficients for two TOS LSs published by
Ertas et al. (2012, “Rotordynamic Force Coefficients for Three Types of
Annular Gas Seals With Inlet Preswirl and High Differential Pressure
Ratio,” ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power, 134(4), pp. 04250301–04250312)
and Vannini et al. (2014, “Labyrinth Seal and Pocket Damper Seal High
Pressure Rotordynamic Test Data,” ASME J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power,
136(2), pp. 022501–022509.)}", issn = {0742-4795}, doi =
{10.1115/1.4041123}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4041123}, note =
{042501}, eprint =
{https://asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/gasturbinespower/article-pdf/141/4/042501/6183430/gtp\_141\_04\_042501.pdf},
} @article{10.1115/1.4040742, author = {Yang, Jing and San Andrés,
Luis}, title = "{On the Influence of the Entrance Section on the
Rotordynamic Performance of a Pump Seal With Uniform Clearance: A Sharp
Edge Versus A Round Inlet}", journal = {Journal of Engineering for Gas
Turbines and Power}, volume = {141}, number = {3}, year = {2018}, pages
= {1-9}, month = {12}, abstract = "{Secondary flows through annular
seals in pumps must be minimized to improve their mechanical efficiency.
Annular seals, in particular balance piston seals, also produce
rotordynamic force coefficients, which easily control the placement of
rotor critical speeds and determine system stability. A uniform
clearance annular seal produces a direct (centering) static stiffness as
a result of the sudden entrance pressure drop at its inlet plane when
the fluid flow accelerates from an upstream (stagnant) flow region into
a narrow film land. This so-called Lomakin effect equates the entrance
pressure drop to the dynamic flow head through an empirical entrance
pressure loss coefficient. Most seal designs regard the inlet as a sharp
edge or square corner. In actuality, a customary manufacturing process
could produce a rounded corner at the seal inlet. Furthermore, after a
long period of operation, a sharp corner may wear out into a round
section. Notice that to this date, bulk-flow model (BFM) analyses rely
on a hitherto unknown entrance pressure coefficient to deliver accurate
predictions for seal force coefficients. This paper establishes the
ground to quantify the influence of an inlet round corner on the
performance of a water lubricated seal reproducing a configuration
tested by Marquette et al. (1997). The smooth surface seal has clearance
Cr = 0.11 mm, length L = 35 mm, and diameter
D = 76 mm (L/D = 0.46). The test case considers
design operation at 10.2 krpm and 6.9 MPa pressure drop.
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations apply to a seal with
either a sharp edge or an inlet section with curvature rc varying from
¼Cr to 5Cr. Note the largest radius (rc) is just 1.6\\% of the overall
seal length L. Going from a sharp edge inlet plane to one with a small
curvature rc = ¼Cr produces a ∼20\\% decrease on the inlet
pressure loss coefficient (ξ). A further reduction occurs with a larger
circular corner; ξ drops from 0.43 to 0.17. That is, the entrance
pressure loss will be lesser in a seal with a curved inlet. This can
occur easily if the inlet edge wears due to solid particles eroding the
seal inlet section. Further CFD simulations show that operating
conditions in rotor speed and pressure drop do not affect the inlet loss
coefficient, while the inlet circumferential swirl velocity does. In
addition, further CFD results for a shorter (half) length seal produce a
very similar entrance loss coefficient, whereas an enlarged (double)
clearance seal leads to an increase in the entrance pressure loss
parameter as the inlet section becomes less round. CFD predictions for
most rotordynamic coefficients are within 10\\% relative to published
test data, except for the direct damping coefficient C. For the seal
with a rounded edge (rc = 5 Cr) at the inlet plane, both
the direct stiffness K and direct damping C decrease about 10\\%
compared against the coefficients for the seal with a sharp inlet edge.
The other force coefficients, namely cross-coupled stiffness and added
mass, are unaffected by the inlet edge geometry. The same result holds
for seal leakage, as expected. A BFM incorporates the CFD derived
entrance pressure loss coefficients and produces rotordynamic
coefficients for the same operating conditions. The CFD and BFM
predictions are in good agreement, though there is still ∼10\\%
discrepancy for the direct stiffnesses delivered by the two methods. In
the end, the analysis of the CFD results quantifies the pressure loss
coefficient as a function of the inlet geometry for ready use in
engineering BFM tools.}", issn = {0742-4795}, doi = {10.1115/1.4040742},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4040742}, note = {031029}, eprint =
{https://asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/gasturbinespower/article-pdf/141/3/031029/6181659/gtp\_141\_03\_031029.pdf},
} @article{10.1115/1.4040766, author = {San Andrés, Luis and Yang, Jing
and Lu, Xueliang}, title = "{On the Leakage, Torque, and Dynamic Force
Coefficients of Air in Oil (Wet) Annular Seal: A Computational Fluid
Dynamics Analysis Anchored to Test Data}", journal = {Journal of
Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power}, volume = {141}, number = {2},
year = {2018}, pages = {1-11}, month = {09}, abstract = "{Subsea pumps
and compressors must withstand multiphase flows whose gas volume
fraction (GVF) or liquid volume fraction (LVF) varies over a wide range.
Gas or liquid content as a dispersed phase in the primary stream affects
the leakage, drag torque, and dynamic forced performance of secondary
flow components, namely seals, thus affecting the process efficiency and
mechanical reliability of pumping/compressing systems, in particular
during transient events with sudden changes in gas (or liquid) content.
This paper, complementing a parallel experimental program, presents a
computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis to predict the leakage, drag
power, and dynamic force coefficients of a smooth surface, uniform
clearance annular seal supplied with air in oil mixture whose inlet GVF
varies discretely from 0.0 to 0.9, i.e., from a pure liquid stream to a
nearly all-gas content mixture. The test seal has uniform radial
clearance Cr = 0.203 mm, diameter
D = 127 mm, and length L = 0.36 D.
The tests were conducted with an inlet pressure/exit pressure ratio
equal to 2.5 and a rotor surface speed of 23.3 m/s (3.5 krpm), similar
to conditions in a pump neck wear ring seal. The CFD two-phase flow
model, first to be anchored to test data, uses an Euler–Euler
formulation and delivers information on the precise evolution of the GVF
and the gas and liquid streams' velocity fields. Recreating the test
data, the CFD seal mass leakage and drag power decrease steadily as the
GVF increases. A multiple-frequency shaft whirl orbit method aids in the
calculation of seal reaction force components, and from which dynamic
force coefficients, frequency-dependent, follow. For operation with a
pure liquid, the CFD results and test data produce a constant
cross-coupled stiffness, damping, and added mass coefficients, while
also verifying predictive formulas typical of a laminar flow. The
injection of air in the oil stream, small or large in gas volume,
immediately produces force coefficients that are frequency-dependent; in
particular the direct dynamic stiffness which hardens with excitation
frequency. The effect is most remarkable for small GVFs, as low as 0.2.
The seal test direct damping and cross-coupled dynamic stiffness
continuously drop with an increase in GVF. CFD predictions, along with
results from a bulk-flow model (BFM), reproduce the test force
coefficients with great fidelity. Incidentally, early engineering
practice points out to air injection as a remedy to cure persistent
(self-excited) vibration problems in vertical pumps, submersible and
large size hydraulic. Presently, the model predictions, supported by the
test data, demonstrate that even a small content of gas in the liquid
stream significantly raises the seal direct stiffness, thus displacing
the system critical speed away to safety. The sound speed of a gas in
liquid mixture is a small fraction of those speeds for either the pure
oil or the gas, hence amplifying the fluid compressibility that produces
the stiffness hardening. The CFD model and a dedicated test rig,
predictions and test data complementing each other, enable engineered
seals for extreme applications.}", issn = {0742-4795}, doi =
{10.1115/1.4040766}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4040766}, note =
{021008}, eprint =
{https://asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/gasturbinespower/article-pdf/141/2/021008/6184351/gtp\_141\_02\_021008.pdf},
} @article{Wang_2017, doi = {10.1088/2053-1583/4/1/015042}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1088/2053-1583/4/1/015042}, year = 2017, month =
{jan}, publisher = {IOP Publishing}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages =
{015042}, author = {Hua Wang and Xiaofeng Qian}, title =
{Two-dimensional multiferroics in monolayer group IV monochalcogenides},
journal = {2D Materials}, } @article{abdoelatef_mesoscale_2019, title =
{Mesoscale Modeling of High Burn-Up Structure Formation and Evolution in
UO2}, volume = {71}, issn = {1543-1851}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-019-03830-z}, doi =
{10.1007/s11837-019-03830-z}, number = {12}, journal = {JOM}, author =
{Abdoelatef, M. Gomaa and Badry, Fergany and Schwen, Daniel and Permann,
Cody and Zhang, Yongfeng and Ahmed, Karim}, month = dec, year = {2019},
pages = {4817-4828}, } @article {Gerth2020.06.23.165548, author =
{Gerth, Michael and Martinez-Montoya, Humberto and Ramirez, Paulino and
Masson, Florent and Griffin, Joanne S. and Aramayo, Rodolfo and Siozios,
Stefanos and Lemaitre, Bruno and Mateos, Mariana and Hurst, Gregory
D.D.}, title = {Rapid molecular evolution of Spiroplasma symbionts of
Drosophila}, elocation-id = {2020.06.23.165548}, year = {2020}, pages =
{1-40}, doi = {10.1101/2020.06.23.165548}, publisher = {Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory}, abstract = {Spiroplasma are a group of Mollicutes
whose members include plant pathogens, insect pathogens, and
endosymbionts of animals. Spiroplasma phenotypes have been repeatedly
observed to be spontaneously lost in Drosophila cultures, and several
studies have documented a high genomic turnover in Spiroplasma symbionts
and plant pathogens. These observations suggest that Spiroplasma evolves
quickly in comparison to other insect symbionts. Here, we systematically
assess evolutionary rates and patterns of Spiroplasma poulsonii, a
natural symbiont of Drosophila. We analysed genomic evolution of sHy
within flies, and sMel within in vitro culture over several years. We
observed that S. poulsonii substitution rates are among the highest
reported for any bacteria, and around two orders of magnitude higher
compared with other inherited arthropod endosymbionts. The absence of
mismatch repair loci mutS and mutL is conserved across Spiroplasma and
likely contributes to elevated substitution rates. Further, the closely
related strains sMel and sHy (>99.5\% sequence identity in shared
loci) show extensive structural genomic differences, which potentially
indicates a higher degree of host adaptation in sHy, a protective
symbiont of Drosophila hydei. Finally, comparison across diverse
Spiroplasma lineages confirms previous reports of dynamic evolution of
toxins, and identifies loci similar to the male-killing toxin Spaid in
several Spiroplasma lineages and other endosymbionts. Overall, our
results highlight the peculiar nature of Spiroplasma genome evolution,
which may explain unusual features of its evolutionary ecology.Competing
Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.}, url
= {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/11/30/2020.06.23.165548},
eprint =
{https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/11/30/2020.06.23.165548.full.pdf},
journal = {bioRxiv} } @article {10.7554/eLife.53127, article_type =
{journal}, title = {Translational control of one-carbon metabolism
underpins ribosomal protein phenotypes in cell division and longevity},
author = {Maitra, Nairita and He, Chong and Blank, Heidi M and Tsuchiya,
Mitsuhiro and Schilling, Birgit and Kaeberlein, Matt and Aramayo,
Rodolfo and Kennedy, Brian K and Polymenis, Michael}, editor = {Smith,
Jeff and Tyler, Jessica K and Smith, Jeff}, volume = 9, year = 2020,
month = {may}, pub_date = {2020-05-20}, pages = {e53127}, citation =
{eLife 2020;9:e53127}, doi = {10.7554/eLife.53127}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.53127}, abstract = {A long-standing
problem is how cells that lack one of the highly similar ribosomal
proteins (RPs) often display distinct phenotypes. Yeast and other
organisms live longer when they lack specific ribosomal proteins,
especially of the large 60S subunit of the ribosome. However, longevity
is neither associated with the generation time of RP deletion mutants
nor with bulk inhibition of protein synthesis. Here, we queried actively
dividing RP mutants through the cell cycle. Our data link
transcriptional, translational, and metabolic changes to phenotypes
associated with the loss of paralogous RPs. We uncovered translational
control of transcripts encoding enzymes of methionine and serine
metabolism, which are part of one-carbon (1C) pathways. Cells lacking
Rpl22Ap, which are long-lived, have lower levels of metabolites
associated with 1C metabolism. Loss of 1C enzymes increased the
longevity of wild type cells. 1C pathways exist in all organisms and
targeting the relevant enzymes could represent longevity
interventions.}, keywords = {ribosomal, translation, one-carbon, cell
cycle, longevity, Rpl22}, journal = {eLife}, issn = {2050-084X},
publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd}, }
@article{mateos_effect_2019, title = {Effect of heritable symbionts on
maternally-derived embryo transcripts}, volume = {9}, issn =
{2045-2322}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-45371-0}, doi =
{10.1038/s41598-019-45371-0}, abstract = {Maternally-transmitted
endosymbiotic bacteria are ubiquitous in insects. Among other
influential phenotypes, many heritable symbionts of arthropods are
notorious for manipulating host reproduction through one of four
reproductive syndromes, which are generally exerted during early
developmental stages of the host: male feminization; parthenogenesis
induction; male killing; and cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI). Major
advances have been achieved in understanding mechanisms and identifying
symbiont factors involved in reproductive manipulation, particularly
male killing and cytoplasmic incompatibility. Nonetheless, whether
cytoplasmically-transmitted bacteria influence the maternally-loaded
components of the egg or early embryo has not been examined. In the
present study, we investigated whether heritable endosymbionts that
cause different reproductive phenotypes in Drosophila melanogaster
influence the mRNA transcriptome of early embryos. We used mRNA-seq to
evaluate differential expression in Drosophila embryos lacking
endosymbionts (control) to those harbouring the male-killing Spiroplasma
poulsonii strain MSRO-Br, the CI-inducing Wolbachia strain wMel, or
Spiroplasma poulsonii strain Hyd1; a strain that lacks a reproductive
phenotype and is naturally associated with Drosophila hydei. We found no
consistent evidence of influence of symbiont on mRNA composition of
early embryos, suggesting that the reproductive manipulation mechanism
does not involve alteration of maternally-loaded transcripts. In
addition, we capitalized on several available mRNA-seq datasets derived
from Spiroplasma-infected Drosophila melanogaster embryos, to search for
signals of depurination of rRNA, consistent with the activity of
Ribosome Inactivating Proteins (RIPs) encoded by Spiroplasma poulsonii.
We found small but statistically significant signals of depurination of
Drosophila rRNA in the Spiroplasma treatments (both strains), but not in
the symbiont-free control or Wolbachia treatment, consistent with the
action of RIPs. The depurination signal was slightly stronger in the
treatment with the male-killing strain. This result supports a recent
report that RIP-induced damage contributes to male embryo death.},
number = {1}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, author = {Mateos, Mariana
and Silva, Nadisha O. and Ramirez, Paulino and Higareda-Alvear, Victor
M. and Aramayo, Rodolfo and Erickson, James W.}, month = jun, year =
{2019}, pages = {8847}, } @article{stavrianakou_draft_2017, title =
{Draft de novo transcriptome assembly and proteome characterization of
the electric lobe of {Tetronarce} californica: a molecular tool for the
study of cholinergic neurotransmission in the electric organ}, volume =
{18}, issn = {1471-2164}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-017-3890-4}, doi =
{10.1186/s12864-017-3890-4}, abstract = {The electric organ of
Tetronarce californica (an electric ray formerly known as Torpedo
californica) is a classic preparation for biochemical studies of
cholinergic neurotransmission. To broaden the usefulness of this
preparation, we have performed a transcriptome assembly of the
presynaptic component of the electric organ (the electric lobe). We
combined our assembled transcriptome with a previous transcriptome of
the postsynaptic electric organ, to define a MetaProteome containing
pre- and post-synaptic components of the electric organ.}, number = {1},
journal = {BMC Genomics}, author = {Stavrianakou, Maria and Perez,
Ricardo and Wu, Cheng and Sachs, Matthew S. and Aramayo, Rodolfo and
Harlow, Mark}, month = aug, year = {2017}, pages = {611}, }
@article{aramayo_ribosome_2017, title = {Ribosome profiling the cell
cycle: lessons and challenges}, volume = {63}, issn = {1432-0983}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1007/s00294-017-0698-3}, doi =
{10.1007/s00294-017-0698-3}, abstract = {Understanding the causes and
consequences of dynamic changes in the abundance and activity of
cellular components during cell division is what most cell cycle studies
are about. Here we focus on control of gene expression in the cell cycle
at the level of translation. The advent of deep sequencing methodologies
led to technologies that quantify the levels of all mRNAs that are bound
by ribosomes and engaged in translation in the cell (Ingolia et al.
Science 324:218–223, 2009). This approach has been applied recently to
synchronous cell populations to find transcripts under translational
control at different cell cycle phases (Blank et al. EMBO J 36:487–502,
2017; Stumpf et al. Mol Cell 52:574–582, 2013; Tanenbaum et al. Elife
4:e07957, 2015). These studies revealed new biology, but they also have
limitations, pointing to challenges that need to be addressed in the
future.}, number = {6}, journal = {Current Genetics}, author = {Aramayo,
Rodolfo and Polymenis, Michael}, month = dec, year = {2017}, pages =
{959-964}, } @article{clanton_control_2017, title = {Control of seizures
by ketogenic diet-induced modulation of metabolic pathways}, volume =
{49}, issn = {1438-2199}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-016-2336-7}, doi =
{10.1007/s00726-016-2336-7}, abstract = {Epilepsy is too complex to be
considered as a disease; it is more of a syndrome, characterized by
seizures, which can be caused by a diverse array of afflictions. As
such, drug interventions that target a single biological pathway will
only help the specific individuals where that drug’s mechanism of action
is relevant to their disorder. Most likely, this will not alleviate all
forms of epilepsy nor the potential biological pathways causing the
seizures, such as glucose/amino acid transport, mitochondrial
dysfunction, or neuronal myelination. Considering our current inability
to test every individual effectively for the true causes of their
epilepsy and the alarming number of misdiagnoses observed, we propose
the use of the ketogenic diet (KD) as an effective and efficient
preliminary/long-term treatment. The KD mimics fasting by altering
substrate metabolism from carbohydrates to fatty acids and ketone bodies
(KBs). Here, we underscore the need to understand the underlying
cellular mechanisms governing the KD’s modulation of various forms of
epilepsy and how a diverse array of metabolites including soluble
fibers, specific fatty acids, and functional amino acids (e.g., leucine,
d-serine, glycine, arginine metabolites, and N-acetyl-cysteine) may
potentially enhance the KD’s ability to treat and reverse, not mask,
these neurological disorders that lead to epilepsy.}, number = {1},
journal = {Amino Acids}, author = {Clanton, Ryan M. and Wu, Guoyao and
Akabani, Gamal and Aramayo, Rodolfo}, month = jan, year = {2017}, pages
= {1-20}, } @article{https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.201695050, author =
{Blank, Heidi M and Perez, Ricardo and He, Chong and Maitra, Nairita and
Metz, Richard and Hill, Joshua and Lin, Yuhong and Johnson, Charles D
and Bankaitis, Vytas A and Kennedy, Brian K and Aramayo, Rodolfo and
Polymenis, Michael}, title = {Translational control of lipogenic enzymes
in the cell cycle of synchronous, growing yeast cells}, journal = {The
EMBO Journal}, volume = {36}, number = {4}, pages = {487-502}, keywords
= {ACC1, cell size, mitosis, translation, upstream open reading frame},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.201695050}, url =
{https://www.embopress.org/doi/abs/10.15252/embj.201695050}, eprint =
{https://www.embopress.org/doi/pdf/10.15252/embj.201695050}, abstract =
{Abstract Translational control during cell division determines when
cells start a new cell cycle, how fast they complete it, the number of
successive divisions, and how cells coordinate proliferation with
available nutrients. The translational efficiencies of mRNAs in cells
progressing synchronously through the mitotic cell cycle, while
preserving the coupling of cell division with cell growth, remain
uninvestigated. We now report comprehensive ribosome profiling of a
yeast cell size series from the time of cell birth, to identify mRNAs
under periodic translational control. The data reveal coordinate
translational activation of mRNAs encoding lipogenic enzymes late in the
cell cycle including Acc1p, the rate-limiting enzyme acetyl-CoA
carboxylase. An upstream open reading frame (uORF) confers the
translational control of ACC1 and adjusts Acc1p protein levels in
different nutrients. The ACC1 uORF is relevant for cell division because
its ablation delays cell cycle progression, reduces cell size, and
suppresses the replicative longevity of cells lacking the Sch9p protein
kinase regulator of ribosome biogenesis. These findings establish an
unexpected relationship between lipogenesis and protein synthesis in
mitotic cell divisions.}, year = {2017} } @article{LI201752, title =
{Synaptic vesicles isolated from the electric organ of Torpedo
californica and from the central nervous system of Mus musculus contain
small ribonucleic acids (sRNAs)}, journal = {Genomics Data}, volume =
{12}, pages = {52-53}, year = {2017}, issn = {2213-5960}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gdata.2017.02.015}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213596017300260},
author = {Huinan Li and Cheng Wu and Rodolfo Aramayo and Matthew S.
Sachs and Mark L. Harlow}, keywords = {Synaptic vesicle, Micro-RNA, tRNA
fragment, , }, abstract = {Synaptic vesicles (SVs) are presynaptic
organelles that load and release small molecule neurotransmitters at
chemical synapses. In addition to classic neurotransmitters, we have
demonstrated that SVs isolated from the Peripheral Nervous Systems (PNS)
of the electric organ of Torpedo californica, a model cholinergic
synapse, and SVs isolated from the Central Nervous System (CNS) of Mus
musculus (mouse) contain small ribonucleic acids (sRNAs; ≤50
nucleotides) (Scientific Reports, 5:1–14(14918) Li et al. (2015) [1]).
Our previous publication provided the five most abundant sequences
associated with the T. californica SVs, and the ten most abundant
sequences associated with the mouse SVs, representing 59% and 39% of the
total sRNA reads sequenced, respectively). We provide here a full
repository of the SV sRNAs sequenced from T. californica and the mouse
deposited in the NCBI as biosamples. Three data studies are included:
SVs isolated from the electric organ of T. californica using standard
techniques, SVs isolated from the electric organ of T. californica using
standard techniques with an additional affinity purification step, and
finally, SVs isolated from the CNS of mouse. The three biosamples are
available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/biosample/ SRS1523467,
SRS1523466, and SRS1523472 respectively.} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JD026080, author = {Saito, Masanori
and Iwabuchi, Hironobu and Yang, Ping and Tang, Guanglin and King,
Michael D. and Sekiguchi, Miho}, title = {Ice particle morphology and
microphysical properties of cirrus clouds inferred from combined
CALIOP-IIR measurements}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research:
Atmospheres}, volume = {122}, number = {8}, pages = {4440-4462},
keywords = {cirrus clouds, remote sensing, oriented plates, lidar
ratio}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JD026080}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/2016JD026080},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/2016JD026080},
abstract = {Abstract Ice particle morphology and microphysical
properties of cirrus clouds are essential for assessing radiative
forcing associated with these clouds. We develop an optimal
estimation-based algorithm to infer cirrus cloud optical thickness
(COT), cloud effective radius (CER), plate fraction including
quasi-horizontally oriented plates (HOPs), and the degree of surface
roughness from the Cloud Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization
(CALIOP) and the Infrared Imaging Radiometer (IIR) on the Cloud Aerosol
Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO) platform.
A simple but realistic ice particle model is used, and the relevant bulk
optical properties are computed using state-of-the-art light-scattering
computational capabilities. Rigorous estimation of uncertainties related
to surface properties, atmospheric gases, and cloud heterogeneity is
performed. The results based on the present method show that COTs are
quite consistent with other satellite products and CERs essentially
agree with the other counterparts. A 1 month global analysis for
April 2007, in which CALIPSO off-nadir angle is 0.3°, shows that the HOP
has significant temperature-dependence and is critical to the lidar
ratio when cloud temperature is warmer than −40°C. The lidar ratio is
calculated from the bulk optical properties based on the inferred
parameters, showing robust temperature dependence. The median lidar
ratio of cirrus clouds is 27–31 sr over the globe.}, year = {2017}
}
@article{saito_yang_ding_liu_2021, title={A Comprehensive Database of
the Optical Properties of Irregular Aerosol Particles for Radiative
Transfer Simulations},
url={https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/atsc/aop/JAS-D-20-0338.1/JAS-D-20-0338.1.xml},
journal={AMETSOC}, publisher={American Meteorological Society},
author={Saito, Masanori and Yang, Ping and Ding, Jiachen and Liu, Xu},
pages = {2089-2111}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-20-0338.1},
keywords = {Radiative transfer; Databases; Aerosol optical properties},
year={2021}, month={Jul} }
@article{saito_yang_2019, title={Oriented Ice Crystals: A
Single-Scattering Property Database for Applications to Lidar and
Optical Phenomenon Simulations},
url={https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/atsc/76/9/jas-d-19-0031.1.xml},
journal={AMETSOC}, publisher={American Meteorological Society},
author={Saito, Masanori and Yang, Ping}, pages = {2635-2652}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-19-0031.1}, keywords = {Cloud
microphysics; Radiative transfer; Databases; Remote sensing},
year={2019}, month={Sep} }
@article{saito_yang_loeb_kato_2019, title={A Novel Parameterization of
Snow Albedo Based on a Two-Layer Snow Model with a Mixture of Grain
Habits},
url={https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/atsc/76/5/jas-d-18-0308.1.xml},
journal={AMETSOC}, publisher={American Meteorological Society},
author={Saito, Masanori and Yang, Ping and Loeb, Norman G. and Kato,
Seiji}, pages = {1419-1436}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-18-0308.1}, keywords = {Snow; Albedo; Ice
particles; Radiative transfer; Snow cover; Parameterization},
year={2019}, month={May} }
@Article{rs13142754, AUTHOR = {Wang, Yi and Yang, Ping and King, Michael
D. and Baum, Bryan A.}, TITLE = {Optical Property Model for Cirrus
Clouds Based on Airborne Multi-Angle Polarization Observations}, JOURNAL
= {Remote Sensing}, VOLUME = {13}, YEAR = {2021}, NUMBER = {14},
ARTICLE-NUMBER = {2754}, URL =
{https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/14/2754}, ISSN = {2072-4292}, PAGES =
{1-18}, ABSTRACT = {We present an improved remote sensing technique to
infer an optimal habit/shape model for ice particles in cirrus clouds
using multi-angle polarimetric measurements at 865 nm made by the
Airborne Multi-angle SpectroPolarimeter Imager (AirMSPI) instrument. The
common method of ice model inference is based on intensity (total
reflectivity) measurements, which is generally not applicable to
optically thin ice clouds (i.e., cirrus clouds) where single scattering
dominates. The new approach is able to infer an ice model in clouds with
optical thicknesses smaller than 5. The improvement is made by first
assuming the optical thickness retrieved using total reflectivity.
Subsequently, the polarized reflectivity is calculated based on look-up
tables generated from simulated polarized reflectances computed for
cirrus clouds in conjunction with eight ice particle models. The ice
particle model that leads to the closest fit to the measurements is
regarded as the optimal ice particle model. Additionally, an alternative
method is applied that does not consider polarized reflectivity. These
two methods are applied to a data sample as a proof-of-concept study
where AirMSPI observed a single cirrus layer. In this case study, the
hexagonal column aggregate model works for most pixels both with and
without considering polarized reflectivities. The retrieval cost
function is high when the camera pairs with large zenith angles are
included in the retrievals. This result suggests that further studies
will be necessary to have a better understanding of all eight selected
ice particle models at scattering angles smaller than 100°.}, DOI =
{10.3390/rs13142754} }
@Article{rs10121981, AUTHOR = {Wang, Yi and Hioki, Souichiro and Yang,
Ping and King, Michael D. and Di Girolamo, Larry and Fu, Dongwei and
Baum, Bryan A.}, TITLE = {Inference of an Optimal Ice Particle Model
through Latitudinal Analysis of MISR and MODIS Data}, JOURNAL = {Remote
Sensing}, VOLUME = {10}, YEAR = {2018}, NUMBER = {12}, ARTICLE-NUMBER =
{1981}, PAGES = {1-17}, URL =
{https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/12/1981}, ISSN = {2072-4292},
ABSTRACT = {The inference of ice cloud properties from remote sensing
data depends on the assumed forward ice particle model, as they are used
in the radiative transfer simulations that are part of the retrieval
process. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
Collection 6 (MC6) ice cloud property retrievals are produced in
conjunction with a single-habit ice particle model with a fixed degree
of ice particle surface roughness (the MC6 model). In this study, we
examine the MC6 model and five other ice models with either smoother or
rougher surface textures to determine an optimal model to reproduce the
angular variation of the radiation field sampled by the Multi-angle
Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR) as a function of latitude. The
spherical albedo difference (SAD) method is used to infer an optimal ice
particle model. The method is applied to collocated MISR and MODIS data
over ocean for clouds with temperatures ≤233 K during December solstice
from 2012–2015. The range of solar zenith angles covered by the MISR
cameras is broader at the solstices than at other times of the year,
with fewer scattering angles associated with sun glint during the
December solstice than the June solstice. The results suggest a
latitudinal dependence in an optimal ice particle model, and an
additional dependence on the solar zenith angle (SZA) at the time of the
observations. The MC6 model is one of the most optimal models on the
global scale. In further analysis, the results are filtered by a cloud
heterogeneity index to investigate cloudy scenarios that are less
susceptible to potential 3D effects. Compared to results for global
data, the consistency between measurements and a given model can be
distinguished in both the tropics and extra-tropics. The SAD analysis
suggests that the optimal model for thick homogeneous clouds corresponds
to more roughened ice particles in the tropics than in the
extra-tropics. While the MC6 model is one of the models most consistent
with the global data, it may not be the most optimal model for the
tropics.}, DOI = {10.3390/rs10121981} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD030457, author = {Wang, Yi and
Yang, Ping and Hioki, Souichiro and King, Michael D. and Baum, Bryan A.
and Di Girolamo, Larry and Fu, Dongwei}, title = {Ice Cloud Optical
Thickness, Effective Radius, And Ice Water Path Inferred From Fused MISR
and MODIS Measurements Based on a Pixel-Level Optimal Ice Particle
Roughness Model}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research:
Atmospheres}, volume = {124}, number = {22}, pages = {12126-12140},
keywords = {ice clouds, MISR, MODIS, optical thickness, effective
radius, ice particle model}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD030457}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2019JD030457},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2019JD030457},
abstract = {Abstract The Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR)
provides measurements over a wider scattering-angle range for a given
location than a cross-track scanning sensor such as the MODerate
resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Based on a full year
(2013) of fused MISR-MODIS datasets, we develop a variable surface
roughness model for ice particles with the goal of identifying the
optimal degree of roughness in the ice model for a given pixel
containing single-layer ice clouds. For the MISR-MODIS observations over
oceans, severe roughness values are often selected for a pixel when
optical thickness (τ) and particle effective radius (Reff) are large in
conjunction with larger cloud heterogeneity index (Hσ) or a warmer cloud
top temperature. Furthermore, τ, Reff, and ice water path are retrieved
with the optimal model and compared to operational MODIS Collection 6
(MC6) products that assume a constant roughness. In general, the
retrievals based on the present optimal model lead to greater
consistency with MISR measurements, and result in larger median τ by
10.1\% and smaller median Reff by 6.5\% but almost identical ice water
path in comparison with the MC6 counterparts. The higher average τ value
is caused by a slightly larger number of large τ cases, but the smaller
average Reff value is due to the shifting of the retrieved Reff value
toward smaller values by approximately 2–4 μm in comparison to the MC6
distribution over all seasons. Both τ retrievals have similar regional
and monthly variations, but a larger annual cycle of Reff is associated
with the optimal model.}, year = {2019} }
@article{ren_li_muller_yang_2021, title={Sensitivity of radiative flux
simulations to ice cloud parameterization over the equatorial western
Pacific Ocean region}, DOI={10.1175/jas-d-21-0017.1}, author={Ren, Tong
and Li, Dongchen and Muller, Jake and Yang, Ping}, journal={Journal of
the Atmospheric Sciences}, pages = {2549-2571}, volume = {78}, number =
{8}, year={2021}, month = jul, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-21-0017.1}, url =
{https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/atsc/aop/JAS-D-21-0017.1/JAS-D-21-0017.1.xml}
}
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JD033968, author = {Gu, Boyan and
Ren, Tong and Kuo, Chia-Pang and Yang, Ping and Bowman, Kenneth}, title
= {Global Impact of Cloud Longwave Scattering in an Atmosphere-Only
General Circulation Model Simulation}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical
Research: Atmospheres}, volume = {126}, number = {3}, pages =
{e2020JD033968}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JD033968}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2020JD033968},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2020JD033968},
note = {e2020JD033968 2020JD033968}, abstract = {Abstract Most general
circulation models (GCMs) neglect cloud longwave scattering in pursuit
of computational efficiency. This study implements the 2-/4-stream
(2/4S) method, a relatively fast cloud longwave scattering treatment, in
Community Atmospheric Model version 5 (CAM5) to analyze the impact of
cloud longwave scattering on the large-scale circulation. Two
45-years-long integrations are performed with prescribed sea surface
temperature (SST). In the experiment run, cloud longwave scattering is
included using the 2/4S method; in the control run, clouds only absorb
in the longwave. The results show that cloud longwave scattering acts to
enhance the cloud longwave (greenhouse) effect by reducing outgoing
longwave radiation (OLR) and enhancing downward longwave irradiance at
the surface. The OLR reduction is most significant over the tropics,
where surface temperatures and cloud elevations are high. The surface
downward irradiance increase is most significant over polar areas and
the Tibetan Plateau, where cloud elevations are low and the air below
clouds is dry. Inclusion of cloud longwave scattering enhances the
Walker circulation, suggestive of the importance of diabatic radiative
heating in the tropical circulation. Inclusion of cloud longwave
scattering also appears to shift the eddy-driven jet poleward in the
austral summer in the Southern Hemisphere, suggesting that the cloud
longwave effect plays a role in shaping the jet position. Persistent
equatorward jet biases in GCMs may be reduced if cloud longwave
scattering is considered.}, year = {2021} }
@article{BI201693, title = {Tunneling effects in electromagnetic wave
scattering by nonspherical particles: A comparison of the Debye series
and physical-geometric optics approximations}, journal = {Journal of
Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {178}, pages
= {93-107}, year = {2016}, note = {Electromagnetic and light scattering
by nonspherical particles XV: Celebrating 150 years of Maxwell's
electromagnetics}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2015.11.022}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002240731530100X},
author = {Lei Bi and Ping Yang}, keywords = {Debye series, Diffraction,
Reflection, Tunneling}, abstract = {The accuracy of the
physical-geometric optics (PG-O) approximation is examined for the
simulation of electromagnetic scattering by nonspherical dielectric
particles. This study seeks a better understanding of the tunneling
effect on the phase matrix by employing the invariant imbedding method
to rigorously compute the zeroth-order Debye series, from which the
tunneling efficiency and the phase matrix corresponding to the
diffraction and external reflection are obtained. The tunneling
efficiency is shown to be a factor quantifying the relative importance
of the tunneling effect over the Fraunhofer diffraction near the forward
scattering direction. Due to the tunneling effect, different geometries
with the same projected cross section might have different diffraction
patterns, which are traditionally assumed to be identical according to
the Babinet principle. For particles with a fixed orientation, the PG-O
approximation yields the external reflection pattern with reasonable
accuracy, but ordinarily fails to predict the locations of peaks and
minima in the diffraction pattern. The larger the tunneling efficiency,
the worse the PG-O accuracy is at scattering angles less than 90°. If
the particles are assumed to be randomly oriented, the PG-O
approximation yields the phase matrix close to the rigorous counterpart,
primarily due to error cancellations in the orientation-average process.
Furthermore, the PG-O approximation based on an electric field
volume-integral equation is shown to usually be much more accurate than
the Kirchhoff surface integral equation at side-scattering angles,
particularly when the modulus of the complex refractive index is close
to unity. Finally, tunneling efficiencies are tabulated for
representative faceted particles.} }
@article{Hioki2016, doi = {10.5194/acp-16-7545-2016}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-16-7545-2016}, year = {2016}, month = jun,
publisher = {Copernicus {GmbH}}, volume = {16}, number = {12}, pages =
{7545-7558}, author = {Souichiro Hioki and Ping Yang and Bryan A. Baum
and Steven Platnick and Kerry G. Meyer and Michael D. King and Jerome
Riedi}, title = {Degree of ice particle surface roughness inferred from
polarimetric observations}, journal = {Atmospheric Chemistry and
Physics} }
@article{SUN2016154, title = {Radiance and polarization in the diffusion
region with an arbitrary scattering phase matrix}, journal = {Journal of
Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {183}, pages
= {154-161}, year = {2016}, note = {Viktor V. Sobolev and His Scientific
Legacy}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2016.06.021}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407316302928},
author = {Bingqiang Sun and George W. Kattawar and Ping Yang}, keywords
= {Radiative transfer, Diffusion region, Polarization, Generalized
spherical functions}, abstract = {Radiance and polarization patterns in
an optically deep region, the so-called diffusion region or asymptotic
region, of a homogeneous atmosphere or ocean, depend mainly on the
scattering phase matrix and the single-scattering albedo of the medium.
The radiance and polarization properties in the diffusion region for an
arbitrary scattering phase matrix can be obtained in terms of a series
of the generalized spherical functions. The number of terms is closely
related to the single-scattering albedo of the medium. If the medium is
conservative, the radiance is isotropic in conjunction with no
polarization. If the single-scattering albedo is close to 1, several
terms are sufficient to obtain the patterns, in which the degree of
polarization feature is less than 1%. If the medium is highly
absorptive, more expansion terms are required to obtain the diffusion
patterns. The examples of simulated radiance and polarization patterns
for Rayleigh scattering, Henyey–Greenstein–Rayleigh scattering, and haze
L and cloud C1 scattering, defined by Deirmendjian, are calculated.} }
@article{SUN20161, title = {Rigorous 3-D vectorial complex ray model
applied to light scattering by an arbitrary spheroid}, journal =
{Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume =
{179}, pages = {1-10}, year = {2016}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2016.03.010}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407315303228},
author = {Bingqiang Sun and George W. Kattawar and Ping Yang and Kuan
Fang Ren}, keywords = {Light scattering, Vectorial complex ray-tracing,
Spheroid}, abstract = {After a ray bundle passes a curved surface, the
equal-phase wavefront associated with the refracted rays will be
distorted. Consequently, the cross-section of a ray bundle with a curved
wavefront during propagation in a homogeneous medium will vary with the
ray-bundle propagation distance. Moreover, the phase of a ray bundle
with convergent wavefront will undergo a phase shift of π/2 with each
passage of a focal line. The contribution to the scattering amplitude by
a ray bundle after passing a scatterer is determined by three elements:
the cross-section variation of its wavefront, the total phase, and the
refraction coefficients determined by Fresnel equations. In the
geometric optics regime, the aforesaid three elements caused by a curved
surface can be systematically quantified in terms of the vectorial
complex ray-tracing technique. In this study, rigorous vectorial complex
ray-tracing calculations are conducted for light scattering by a general
spheroid and the results are validated in comparison with the benchmarks
provided by the rigorous T-matrix method.} }
@article{SUN2016390, title = {Simulation of the scattering properties of
a chain-forming triangular prism oceanic diatom}, journal = {Journal of
Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {178}, pages
= {390-399}, year = {2016}, note = {Electromagnetic and light scattering
by nonspherical particles XV: Celebrating 150 years of Maxwell's
electromagnetics}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2016.02.035}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407315301278},
author = {Bingqiang Sun and George W. Kattawar and Ping Yang and Michael
S. Twardowski and James M. Sullivan}, keywords = {Optical properties,
Diatom chains, Many-body iterative T-matrix, Ray-by-ray geometric optics
method}, abstract = {The optical properties of diatom chains in the
ocean are studied based on a combination of the many-body iterative
T-matrix (MBIT) method and an improved implementation of the ray-by-ray
(RBR) geometric optics method. The MBIT, a numerically accurate method,
is advantageous for scatterers with linear cells. In contrast to other
popular geometric optics methods, the RBR, an approximate method,
considers the interference of all outgoing rays. The two methods are
verified in comparison with benchmark simulations. The simulation
results of diatom chains in a wide size range can be obtained with
either or both methods, and each can be applied to any optically soft
particle, i.e., in the case when relative refractive index approaches
unity.} }
@article{TANG2016416, title = {Sensitivity study of ice crystal optical
properties in the 874GHz submillimeter band}, journal = {Journal of
Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {178}, pages
= {416-421}, year = {2016}, note = {Electromagnetic and light scattering
by nonspherical particles XV: Celebrating 150 years of Maxwell's
electromagnetics}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2015.12.008}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002240731530131X},
author = {Guanglin Tang and Ping Yang and Dong L. Wu}, keywords = {Ice
crystals, Optical properties, 874GHz, Submillimeter}, abstract =
{Testing of an 874GHz submillimeter radiometer on meteorological
satellites is being planned to improve ice water content retrievals. In
this paper we study the optical properties of ice cloud particles in the
874GHz band. The results show that the bulk scattering and absorption
coefficients of an ensemble of ice cloud particles are sensitive to the
particle shape and effective diameter, whereas the latter is also
sensitive to temperature. The co-polar back scattering cross-section is
not sensitive to particle shape, temperature, and the effective diameter
in the range of 50–200μm.} } ~
@article{TANG201670, title = {Enhancement of the computational
efficiency of the near-to-far field mapping in the finite-difference
method and ray-by-ray method with the fast multi-pole plane wave
expansion approach}, journal = {Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and
Radiative Transfer}, volume = {176}, pages = {70-81}, year = {2016},
issn = {0022-4073}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2016.02.027},
url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407316300061},
author = {Guanglin Tang and Ping Yang and Bingqiang Sun and R. Lee
Panetta and George W. Kattawar}, keywords = {Fast multi-pole, Plane wave
expansion, Finite-difference time-domain, Ray-by-ray, Near-to-far field
mapping}, abstract = {The finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) and
ray-by-ray (RBR) methods are techniques used to calculate the optical
properties of nonspherical particles for small-to-moderate and large
size parameters, respectively. The former is a rigorous method, and the
latter is an approximate geometric–physical optics-hybrid method that
takes advantage of both high efficiency of the geometric optics approach
and high accuracy of the physical optics approach. In these two methods,
the far field is calculated by mapping the near field to the far field
with consideration of the phase interference. The mapping computation is
more time-consuming than the near-field simulation when multiple
scattering directions are involved, particularly in the case of the RBR
implementation. To overcome the difficulty, in this study the fast
multi-pole method is applied to both FDTD and RBR towards accelerating
the far-field calculation, without degrading the accuracy of the
simulation results.} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JD025207, author = {Yi, Bingqi and
Yang, Ping and Liu, Quanhua and van Delst, Paul and Boukabara, Sid-Ahmed
and Weng, Fuzhong}, title = {Improvements on the ice cloud modeling
capabilities of the Community Radiative Transfer Model}, journal =
{Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres}, volume = {121}, number =
{22}, pages = {13,577-13,590}, keywords = {CRTM, ice cloud, radiative
transfer, optical properties}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JD025207}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/2016JD025207},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/2016JD025207},
abstract = {Abstract Noticeable improvements on the ice cloud modeling
capabilities of the Community Radiative Transfer Model (CRTM) are
reported, which are based on the most recent advances in understanding
ice cloud microphysical (particularly, ice particle habit/shape
characteristics) and optical properties. The new CRTM ice cloud model is
derived from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
collection 6 ice cloud habit model, which represents ice particles as
severely roughened hexagonal ice column aggregates with a gamma size
distribution. The single-scattering properties of the new ice particle
model are derived from a state-of-the-art ice optical property library
and are constructed as look-up tables for rapid CRTM computations.
Various sensitivity studies concerning instrument-specific applications
and simulations are performed to validate CRTM against satellite
observations. In particular, radiances in a spectral region covering the
infrared wavelengths are simulated. Comparisons of brightness
temperatures between CRTM simulations and observations (from MODIS, the
Atmospheric Infrared Sounder, and the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit)
show that the new ice cloud optical property look-up table substantially
enhances the performance of the CRTM under ice cloud conditions.}, year
= {2016} }
@article{ZHANG2016325, title = {Optical scattering simulation of ice
particles with surface roughness modeled using the Edwards-Wilkinson
equation}, journal = {Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative
Transfer}, volume = {178}, pages = {325-335}, year = {2016}, note =
{Electromagnetic and light scattering by nonspherical particles XV:
Celebrating 150 years of Maxwell's electromagnetics}, issn =
{0022-4073}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2016.02.013}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407315301321},
author = {Jianing Zhang and Lei Bi and Jianping Liu and R. Lee Panetta
and Ping Yang and George W. Kattawar}, keywords = {Particle surface
roughness, Light scattering, Edwards-Wilkinson equation, Discrete
differential geometry}, abstract = {Constructing an appropriate particle
morphology model is essential for realistic simulation of optical
properties of atmospheric particles. This paper presents a model for
generating surface roughness based on a combination of methods from
discrete differential geometry combined with a stochastic partial
differential equation for surface evolution introduced by Edwards and
Wilkinson. Scattering of light by roughened particles is simulated using
the Invariant Imbedding T-Matrix (II-TM) method. The effects of surface
roughness on the single-scattering properties, namely, the phase matrix,
asymmetry factor, and extinction efficiency, are investigated for a
single wavelength in the visible range and for a range of size
parameters up to x=50. Three different smooth shapes are considered:
spherical, spheroidal, and hexagonal, the latter two in just the
“compact particle” case of unit aspect ratio. It is shown that roughness
has negligible effects on the optical scattering properties for size
parameters less than 20. For size parameters ranging from 20 to 50, the
phase matrix elements are more sensitive to the surface roughness than
are two important integral optical properties, the extinction efficiency
and asymmetry factor. As has been seen in studies using other forms of
roughening, the phase function is progressively smoothed as roughness
increases. The effect on extinction efficiency is to increase it, and on
asymmetry factor is to decrease it. Each of these effects is relatively
modest in the size range considered, but the trend of results suggests
that greater effects will be seen for size parameters larger than ones
considered here.} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1002/2017MS001117, author = {Kuo, Chia-Pang
and Yang, Ping and Huang, Xianglei and Feldman, Daniel and Flanner, Mark
and Kuo, Chaincy and Mlawer, Eli J.}, title = {Impact of Multiple
Scattering on Longwave Radiative Transfer Involving Clouds}, journal =
{Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems}, volume = {9}, number =
{8}, pages = {3082-3098}, keywords = {longwave scattering, radiative
effect of clouds, radiative transfer, doubling CO2, outgoing longwave
radiation, simulation biases}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1002/2017MS001117}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/2017MS001117},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/2017MS001117},
abstract = {Abstract General circulation models (GCMs) are extensively
used to estimate the influence of clouds on the global energy budget and
other aspects of climate. Because radiative transfer computations
involved in GCMs are costly, it is typical to consider only absorption
but not scattering by clouds in longwave (LW) spectral bands. In this
study, the flux and heating rate biases due to neglecting the scattering
of LW radiation by clouds are quantified by using advanced cloud optical
property models, and satellite data from Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and
Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO), CloudSat, Clouds
and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES), and Moderate Resolution
Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS) merged products (CCCM). From the products,
information about the atmosphere and clouds (microphysical and buck
optical properties, and top and base heights) is used to simulate fluxes
and heating rates. One-year global simulations for 2010 show that the LW
scattering decreases top-of-atmosphere (TOA) upward flux and increases
surface downward flux by 2.6 and 1.2 W/m2, respectively, or
approximately 10\% and 5\% of the TOA and surface LW cloud radiative
effect, respectively. Regional TOA upward flux biases are as much as 5\%
of global averaged outgoing longwave radiation (OLR). LW scattering
causes approximately 0.018 K/d cooling at the tropopause and about 0.028
K/d heating at the surface. Furthermore, over 40\% of the total OLR bias
for ice clouds is observed in 350–500 cm−1. Overall, the radiative
effects associated with neglecting LW scattering are comparable to the
counterpart due to doubling atmospheric CO2 under clear-sky
conditions.}, year = {2017} }
@article{Sun2017, doi = {10.1175/jas-d-16-0278.1}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1175/jas-d-16-0278.1}, year = {2017}, month = {may},
publisher = {American Meteorological Society}, volume = {74}, number =
{6}, pages = {1959-1987}, keywords = {Albedo; Atmosphere-land
interaction; Clouds; Planetary atmospheres; Radiances; Radiative
transfer}, author = {Bingqiang Sun and George W. Kattawar and Ping Yang
and Eli Mlawer}, title = {An Improved Small-Angle Approximation for
Forward Scattering and Its Use in a Fast Two-Component Radiative
Transfer Method}, journal = {Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences} }
@article{Sun:17, author = {Bingqiang Sun and Ping Yang and George W.
Kattawar and Xiaodong Zhang}, journal = {Opt. Express}, keywords =
{Scattering; Scattering, particles; Effective refractive index; Forward
scattering; Geometric optics; Particle scattering; Physical optics;
Refractive index}, number = {20}, pages = {24044-24060}, publisher =
{OSA}, title = {Physical-geometric optics method for large size faceted
particles}, volume = {25}, month = {Oct}, year = {2017}, url =
{http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm?URI=oe-25-20-24044}, doi =
{10.1364/OE.25.024044}, abstract = {A new physical-geometric optics
method is developed to compute the single-scattering properties of
faceted particles. It incorporates a general absorption vector to
accurately account for inhomogeneous wave effects, and subsequently
yields the relevant analytical formulas effective and computationally
efficient for absorptive scattering particles. A bundle of rays incident
on a certain facet can be traced as a single beam. For a beam incident
on multiple facets, a systematic beam-splitting technique based on
computer graphics is used to split the original beam into several
sub-beams so that each sub-beam is incident only on an individual facet.
The new beam-splitting technique significantly reduces the computational
burden. The present physical-geometric optics method can be generalized
to arbitrary faceted particles with either convex or concave shapes and
with a homogeneous or an inhomogeneous (e.g., a particle with a core)
composition. The single-scattering properties of irregular convex
homogeneous and inhomogeneous hexahedra are simulated and compared to
their counterparts from two other methods including a numerically
rigorous method.}, }
@article{Sun:17, author = {Bingqiang Sun and Ping Yang and George W.
Kattawar and Michael I. Mishchenko}, journal = {Opt. Lett.}, keywords =
{Diffraction; Diffractive optics; Scattering, particles; Scattering
theory ; Diffraction; Far field diffraction; Huygens Fresnel principle;
Light scattering; Ptychography; Refractive index}, number = {23}, pages
= {5026-5029}, publisher = {OSA}, title = {On Babinet's principle and
diffraction associated with an arbitrary particle}, volume = {42}, month
= {Dec}, year = {2017}, url =
{http://ol.osa.org/abstract.cfm?URI=ol-42-23-5026}, doi =
{10.1364/OL.42.005026}, abstract = {Babinet's principle is widely used
to compute the diffraction by a particle. However, the diffraction by a
3-D object is not totally the same as that simulated with Babinet's
principle. This Letter uses a surface integral equation to exactly
formulate the diffraction by an arbitrary particle and illustrate the
condition for the applicability of Babinet's principle. The present
results may serve to close the debate on the diffraction formalism.}, }
@ARTICLE{8002644, author={Tang, Guanglin and Yang, Ping and Stegmann,
Patrick G. and Lee Panetta, R. and Tsang, Leung and Johnson, Benjamin},
journal={IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing},
title={Effect of Particle Shape, Density, and Inhomogeneity on the
Microwave Optical Properties of Graupel and Hailstones}, year={2017},
volume={55}, number={11}, pages={6366-6378},
doi={10.1109/TGRS.2017.2726994} }
@article{Xu:17, author = {Guanglang Xu and Patrick G. Stegmann and Sarah
D. Brooks and Ping Yang}, journal = {Opt. Express}, keywords =
{Atmospheric and oceanic optics ; Remote sensing and sensors ;
Scattering; Effective medium theory; Light properties; Multiple
scattering; Optical depth; Particle scattering; Radiative transfer},
number = {24}, pages = {A990-A1008}, publisher = {OSA}, title =
{Modeling the single and multiple scattering properties of soot-laden
mineral dust aerosols}, volume = {25}, month = {Nov}, year = {2017}, url
= {http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm?URI=oe-25-24-A990}, doi =
{10.1364/OE.25.00A990}, abstract = {Fractal particle morphologies are
employed to study the light scattering properties of soot-laden mineral
dust aerosols. The applicability of these models is assessed in
comparison with measurements and other numerical studies. To quantify
the dust-soot mixing effects on the single and multiple scattering
properties, a parameterization of the effective bulk properties is
developed. Based on the parameterized bulk properties, polarized
one-dimensional radiative transfer simulations are performed. The
results indicate that small uncertainties in conjunction with soot
contamination parameters may lead to large uncertainties in both forward
and inverse modeling involving mineral dust contaminated with soot.}, }
@article{XU201730, title = {Modeling the inherent optical properties of
aquatic particles using an irregular hexahedral ensemble}, journal =
{Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume =
{191}, pages = {30-39}, year = {2017}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2017.01.020}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407316306598},
author = {Guanglang Xu and Bingqiang Sun and Sarah D. Brooks and Ping
Yang and George W. Kattawar and Xiaodong Zhang}, keywords = {Inherent
optical properties, Aquatic particles, Lorenz-Mie theory, Nonspherical
effects, Hexahedral ensemble, Backscattering properties, Polarimetric
properties}, abstract = {A statistical approach in defining particle
morphology in terms of an ensemble of hexahedra of distorted shapes is
employed for modeling the Inherent Optical Properties (IOPs) of aquatic
particles. The approach is inspired by the rich variability in shapes of
real aquatic particles that cannot be represented by one particular
shape. Two methods, the Invariant Imbedding T-matrix (II-TM) and
Physical Geometric Optics Hybrid (PGOH) method, are combined to simulate
the IOPs for aquatic particles of sizes ranging from the Rayleigh
scattering to geometric optics regimes. Nonspherical effects on the IOPs
are examined by comparing the results with predictions based on the
Lorenz-Mie theory to explore the limitations of assuming the particles
to be spherical. We pay special attention to backscattering-related and
polarimetric scattering properties, particularly the backscattering
ratio, Gordon parameter, backscattering volume scattering function and
the degree of linear polarization. The simulated IOPs are compared with
the in-situ measurements to assess the feasibility of using a hexahedral
ensemble in modeling the IOPs of the aquatic particles.} }
@article{Loeb2018, doi = {10.1175/jcli-d-17-0426.1}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1175/jcli-d-17-0426.1}, year = {2018}, month = mar,
publisher = {American Meteorological Society}, volume = {31}, number =
{5}, pages = {1851-1864}, author = {Norman G. Loeb and Ping Yang and
Fred G. Rose and Gang Hong and Sunny Sun-Mack and Patrick Minnis and
Seiji Kato and Seung-Hee Ham and William L. Smith and Souichiro Hioki
and Guanglin Tang}, title = {Impact of Ice Cloud Microphysics on
Satellite Cloud Retrievals and Broadband Flux Radiative Transfer Model
Calculations}, journal = {Journal of Climate} }
@article{STEGMANN20189, title = {A stochastic model for
density-dependent microwave Snow- and Graupel scattering coefficients of
the NOAA JCSDA community radiative transfer model}, journal = {Journal
of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {211},
pages = {9-24}, year = {2018}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2018.02.026}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407317305782},
author = {Patrick G. Stegmann and Guanglin Tang and Ping Yang and
Benjamin T. Johnson}, keywords = {Snow, Graupel, CRTM, FDTD,
Bicontinuous random medium}, abstract = {A structural model is developed
for the single-scattering properties of snow and graupel particles with
a strongly heterogeneous morphology and an arbitrary variable mass
density. This effort is aimed to provide a mechanism to consider
particle mass density variation in the microwave scattering coefficients
implemented in the Community Radiative Transfer Model (CRTM). The
stochastic model applies a bicontinuous random medium algorithm to a
simple base shape and uses the Finite-Difference-Time-Domain (FDTD)
method to compute the single-scattering properties of the resulting
complex morphology.} }
@article{Tang2018, doi = {10.1175/jas-d-18-0014.1}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1175/jas-d-18-0014.1}, year = {2018}, month = jun,
publisher = {American Meteorological Society}, volume = {75}, number =
{7}, pages = {2217-2233}, author = {Guanglin Tang and Ping Yang and
George W. Kattawar and Xianglei Huang and Eli J. Mlawer and Bryan A.
Baum and Michael D. King}, title = {Improvement of the Simulation of
Cloud Longwave Scattering in Broadband Radiative Transfer Models},
journal = {Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences} }
@article{STEGMANN20191, title = {Study of the effects of phytoplankton
morphology and vertical profile on lidar attenuated backscatter and
depolarization ratio}, journal = {Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy
and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {225}, pages = {1-15}, year = {2019},
issn = {0022-4073}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2018.12.009},
url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407318306022},
author = {Patrick G. Stegmann and Bingqiang Sun and Jiachen Ding and
Ping Yang and Xiaodong Zhang}, keywords = {Monte Carlo, Radiative
transfer, Ocean optics, Phytoplankton, Lidar, Net primary production,
Remote sensing}, abstract = {Propagation of a lidar beam in a coupled
atmosphere-ocean model consisting of multiple atmospheric and upper
oceanic layers and a rough ocean surface is studied by using a
vectorized Monte Carlo radiative transfer solver optimized specifically
for lidar-based remote sensing applications. The effects of assumed
phytoplankton morphology variations and its vertical distribution on the
lidar attenuated backscatter and depolarization ratio are studied. In
this study, a phytoplankton particle is assumed to be a sphere, a sphere
with a core, or a randomly distorted hexahedron with or without a core.
The single-scattering properties of the nonspherical/inhomogeneous
particles are computed using appropriate state-of-the-art
light-scattering computational capabilities. Vertical variation of the
phytoplankton distribution is derived explicitly using a PAR
(photosynthetically active radiation) limited carbon biomass balance
equation that is subsequently coupled with the Monte Carlo solver.} } ~
@article{Zhai:19, author = {Siyao Zhai and R. Lee Panetta and Ping
Yang}, journal = {Opt. Express}, keywords = {Atmospheric ice crystals;
Atmospheric optics; Electric fields; Light scattering; Radiative
transfer; Remote sensing}, number = {20}, pages = {A1441-A1457},
publisher = {OSA}, title = {Improvements in the computational efficiency
and convergence of the Invariant Imbedding T-matrix method for spheroids
and hexagonal prisms}, volume = {27}, month = {Sep}, year = {2019}, url
= {http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm?URI=oe-27-20-A1441}, doi =
{10.1364/OE.27.0A1441}, abstract = {The invariant-imbedding T-matrix
(II-TM) method is a numerical method for accurately computing the
single-scattering properties of dielectric particles. Because of the
linearity of Maxwell&\#x2019;s equations, the incident electric
field and the scattered electric field can be related through a
transition matrix (T-Matrix). The II-TM method computes the T-matrix
through a matrix recurrence formula which stems from an electromagnetic
volume integral equation. The recurrence starts with an inscribed sphere
within the particle and ends with the circumscribed sphere of the
particle. For each iteration, a matrix known as the U-matrix is computed
with the Gauss Legendre (GL) quadrature, and matrix inversion is
subsequently performed to obtain the T-matrix corresponding to the
portion of the particle enclosed by the spherical shell. We modify a
commonly used scheme to avoid applying the quadrature scheme to
discontinuities. Moreover, we apply a new scheme to generate nodes and
weights in conjunction with the GL quadrature. This leads to a
considerable improvement on convergence and computational efficiency in
the cases of hexagonal prisms and spheroids. The basic shapes of ice
crystals in the atmosphere are hexagonal columns and plates. The
single-scattering properties of hexagonal ice prisms are important to
atmospheric optics, radiative transfer, and remote sensing. We
demonstrate that the present approach can significantly accelerate the
convergence in simulating light scattering by hexagonal ice crystals.},
}
@article{KUO2020106683, title = {Assessing the accuracy and efficiency
of longwave radiative transfer models involving scattering effect with
cloud optical property parameterizations}, journal = {Journal of
Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer}, volume = {240}, pages
= {106683}, year = {2020}, issn = {0022-4073}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jqsrt.2019.106683}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022407319305606},
author = {Chia-Pang Kuo and Ping Yang and Xianglei Huang and Yi-Hsuan
Chen and Guosheng Liu}, keywords = {Radiative transfer, Water cloud
parameterization, Ice cloud parameterization}, abstract = {A radiative
transfer model (RTM) that accurately and explicitly accounts for both
absorbing and scattering effects requires a substantial amount of
computational effort. In the longwave (LW) spectral regime, the
atmosphere is optically opaque and absorbs a large portion of
terrestrial thermal radiation. To alleviate the computational burden,
clouds are assumed to be only absorptive in most general circulation
models (GCMs) and their scattering effects are neglected. Using
parameterizations of cloud bulk single-scattering properties derived
from the latest cloud optical property models for satellite remote
sensing, this study analyzes the numerical accuracy and efficiency of a
variety of LW RTMs . The approaches considered in this study include the
absorption approximation (AA), the absorption approximation with
scattering parameterization (ASA), the two-stream approximation (2S), a
hybrid two- and four-stream approximation (2/4S), and the discrete
ordinate radiative transfer (DISORT) with multiple streams. These
approximations are benchmarked against 128-stream DISORT calculation.
After evaluating the full ranges of ice and water cloud optical and
microphysical properties using these RTMs, we find that neglecting LW
scattering effect causes simulation errors as large as ±15% by using the
AA method. Among these RTMs, the 2/4S method provides an optimal balance
between computational efficiency and accuracy, leading to the maximum
cloud emissivity errors within ±5%, 25th to 75th percentile errors about
±1%, and almost zero net bias. Therefore, the 2/4S approximation is
computationally accurate and yet affordable option for incorporating
cloud longwave scattering effect into the radiation schemes used in
weather and climate models.} }
@article{10.1371/journal.pntd.0009334, doi =
{10.1371/journal.pntd.0009334}, author = {Tsujimoto, Hitoshi and
Anderson, Michelle A. E. and Eggleston, Heather and Myles, Kevin M. and
Adelman, Zach N.}, journal = {PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases},
publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {Aedes aegypti
dyspepsia encodes a novel member of the SLC16 family of transporters and
is critical for reproductive fitness}, year = {2021}, month = {04},
volume = {15}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009334},
pages = {1-19}, abstract = {As a key vector for major arthropod-borne
viruses (arboviruses) such as dengue, Zika and chikungunya, control of
Aedes aegypti represents a major challenge in public health. Bloodmeal
acquisition is necessary for the reproduction of vector mosquitoes and
pathogen transmission. Blood contains potentially toxic amounts of iron
while it provides nutrients for mosquito offspring; disruption of iron
homeostasis in the mosquito may therefore lead to novel control
strategies. We previously described a potential iron exporter in Ae.
aegypti after a targeted functional screen of ZIP (zinc-regulated
transporter/Iron-regulated transporter-like) and ZnT (zinc transporter)
family genes. In this study, we performed an RNAseq-based screen in an
Ae. aegypti cell line cultured under iron-deficient and iron-excess
conditions. A subset of differentially expressed genes were analyzed via
a cytosolic iron-sensitive dual-luciferase reporter assay with several
gene candidates potentially involved in iron transport. In vivo gene
silencing resulted in significant reduction of fecundity (egg number)
and fertility (hatch rate) for one gene, termed dyspepsia. Silencing of
dyspepsia reduced the induction of ferritin expression in the midgut and
also resulted in delayed/impaired excretion and digestion. Further
characterization of this gene, including a more direct confirmation of
its substrate (iron or otherwise), could inform vector control
strategies as well as to contribute to the field of metal biology.},
number = {4}, }
@article{ZHENG2020138924, title = {Structural and microstructural
influence on deformation and fracture of dual-phase steels}, journal =
{Materials Science and Engineering: A}, volume = {774}, pages =
{138924}, year = {2020}, issn = {0921-5093}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2020.138924}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921509320300162},
author = {Xinzhu Zheng and Hassan Ghassemi-Armaki and Ankit Srivastava},
keywords = {Characterization, Finite element analysis, In situ tension
test, Digital image correlation, Plasticity, Fracture behavior},
abstract = {The objective of this work is to demonstrate that the
mechanical response of multiphase materials is fundamentally different
in an imposed deformation field that is homogeneous, versus in an
imposed deformation field that is heterogeneous, at a length-scale
greater than the microstructural length-scale. To this end, we focus on
two dual-phase steels with significantly different nominal chemical
composition and microstructure. The mechanical response of the steels is
characterized by in-situ SEM tensile tests of flat dog-bone and
single-edge notch specimens. The experimental results show that the
dog-bone specimens of the two steels exhibit very similar mechanical
response but the mechanical response of their single-edge notch
specimens differs significantly. This is in contrast to any classical
analysis that will predict the same mechanical response in the presence
of a notch for two materials that give the same mechanical response
under uniaxial tension. The high resolution in-situ tests coupled with
microstructure-based digital image correlation and finite element
analysis are then used to elucidate how the interlacing of imposed
heterogeneous deformation field and material microstructure affects the
mechanical response of these steels. Our results clearly highlight that
a mechanistic analysis of multiphase materials under imposed
heterogeneous deformation field must involve explicit consideration of
the length-scales associated with the material microstructure.} }
@article{Chen_2021, doi = {10.3847/1538-4357/ac178d}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac178d}, year = 2021, month = {nov},
publisher = {American Astronomical Society}, volume = {922}, number =
{1}, pages = {15}, author = {Xingzhuo Chen and Lei Hu and Lifan Wang},
title = {Constraining Type Ia Supernova Delay Time with Spatially
Resolved Star Formation Histories}, journal = {The Astrophysical
Journal}, abstract = {We present the delay time distribution (DTD)
estimates of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) using spatially resolved SN Ia
host galaxy spectra from MUSE and MaNGA. By employing a grouping
algorithm based on k-means and earth mover’s distances (EMDs), we
separated the host galaxy stellar population age distributions (SPADs)
into spatially distinct regions and used maximum likelihood method to
constrain the DTD of SN Ia progenitors. When a power-law model of the
form DTD(t) ∝ t s (t > τ) is used, we find an SN rate decay slope and
a delay time . Moreover, we tested other DTD models, such as a broken
power-law model and a two-component power-law model, and found no
statistically significant support for these alternative models.} }
@article{Chen_2020, doi = {10.3847/1538-4365/ab9a3b}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/ab9a3b}, year = 2020, month = {sep},
publisher = {American Astronomical Society}, volume = {250}, number =
{1}, pages = {12}, author = {Xingzhuo Chen and Lei Hu and Lifan Wang},
title = {Artificial Intelligence-Assisted Inversion (AIAI) of Synthetic
Type Ia Supernova Spectra}, journal = {The Astrophysical Journal
Supplement Series}, abstract = {We generate ∼100,000 model spectra of
Type 1a supernovae (SNe Ia) to form a spectral library for the
purpose of building an artificial intelligence–assisted inversion (AIAI)
algorithm for theoretical models. As a first attempt, we restrict our
studies to the time around B-band maximum and compute theoretical
spectra with a broad spectral wavelength coverage from 2000 to 10000 Å
using the code TARDIS. Based on the library of theoretically calculated
spectra, we construct the AIAI algorithm with a multiresidual
convolutional neural network to retrieve the contributions of different
ionic species to the heavily blended spectral profiles of the
theoretical spectra. The AIAI is found to be very powerful in
distinguishing spectral patterns due to coupled atomic transitions and
has the capacity to quantitatively measure the contributions from
different ionic species. By applying the AIAI algorithm to a set of
well-observed SN Ia spectra, we demonstrate that the model can
yield powerful constraints on the chemical structures of these
SNe Ia. Using the chemical structures deduced from AIAI, we
successfully reconstructed the observed data, thus confirming the
validity of the method. We show that the light-curve decline rate of
SNe Ia is correlated with the amount of 56Ni above the photosphere
in the ejecta. We detect a clear decrease of 56Ni mass with time that
can be attributed to its radioactive decay. Our code and model spectra
are available on the
website https://github.com/GeronimoChen/AIAI-Supernova.} }
@inproceedings{musick2021numerical, url =
{https://meetings.aps.org/Meeting/DFD21/Session/F25.2}, pages = { F25 },
number = { 17 }, volume = { 66 }, year = { 2021 }, title = { Numerical
Simulations of High Speed, Reacting, Multiphase Flows }, booktitle = {
74th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics }, author = {
Musick and Paudel and McFarland and Ramaprabhu and Tarey }, abstract =
{While gaseous detonations are well studied and documented by the
scientific community, detonations propagating through liquid fogs and
sprays of fuel are less understood. Multiphase detonations develop
characteristics that are more complicated to predict than single phase
reactions. Newer technologies such as Pulse and Rotating Detonation
Engines (PDE and RDE) aim to utilize common liquid propellants and drive
a need to understand the multiphase detonation process better. This
presentation will focus on the numerical results of liquid spray
detonations with a primary focus on n-dodecane as a fuel. The effects of
droplet sizes, distributions, evaporation, and breakup will be discussed
in detail. The multiphase results will be compared to data from
idealized, single phase simulations and results from other simulation
codes. The software used to generate this data is the FLASH code, in
part developed by the Flash Center at the University of Chicago, and
modified for this problem to include an induction parameter model for
single step reactions and active, Lagrangian particles using the
Particle-in-Cell (PIC) method.}, }
@article{holt2020hydrogel, doi = {10.1002/marc.202000287}, url =
{https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32515861}, title={Hydrogel Synthesis
and Stabilization via Tetrazine Click-Induced Secondary Interactions},
author={Holt, Samantha E and Rakoski, Amanda and Jivan, Faraz and Perez,
Lisa M and Alge, Daniel L}, journal={Macromolecular Rapid
Communications}, volume={41}, number={14}, pages={2000287}, year={2020},
publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@inproceedings{gardner2019streamlining, title={Streamlining Simulation
and Data Transfer in a Heterogeneous Environment},
url={https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3332186.3335199}, author={Gardner,
Matthew C and Luo, Ping and Johnson, Matthew and Toliyat, Hamid A},
booktitle={Proceedings of the Practice and Experience in Advanced
Research Computing on Rise of the Machines (learning)}, pages={1-3},
year={2019} } @inproceedings{zainab2020distributed,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9039899}, title={Distributed
computing for smart meter data management for electrical utility
applications}, author={Zainab, Ameema and Refaat, Shady S and Abu-Rub,
Haitham and Bouhali, Othmane}, booktitle={2020 Cybernetics &
Informatics (K&I)}, pages={1--6}, year={2020}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{jochum2019host,
url={https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0225933},
title={Host-mediated microbiome engineering (HMME) of drought tolerance
in the wheat rhizosphere}, author={Jochum, Michael D and McWilliams,
Kelsey L and Pierson, Elizabeth A and Jo, Young-Ki}, journal={Plos one},
volume={14}, number={12}, pages={e0225933}, year={2019},
publisher={Public Library of Science San Francisco, CA USA} }
@conference{jufinding,
url={https://hprc.tamu.edu/files/events/conferences/sc2014/Poster.Yang_Liu.Finding_Vertex_Cover_Acceleration_via_CUDA.pdf},
title={Finding Vertex Cover: Acceleration via CUDA}, pages={1},
year={2014}, author={Liu, Yang and Ju, Jinbin and Rodriguez, Derek} }
@article{lim2018neutron,
url={https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.062701},
title={Neutron star tidal deformabilities constrained by nuclear theory
and experiment}, author={Lim, Yeunhwan and Holt, Jeremy W},
journal={Physical review letters}, volume={121}, number={6},
pages={062701}, year={2018}, publisher={APS} }
@conference{duongmolecular,
url={https://hprc.tamu.edu/files/events/conferences/sc2020/poster.Duong.TD_HPRC20.pdf},
title={Molecular dynamics simulation of high strain rate
nanoindentation}, author={Duong, T and Demkowicz, MJ}, pages={1},
year={2020}, } @article{mortazavi2018prediction,
url={https://asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/vibrationacoustics/article/140/3/031002/392590/Prediction-of-Rotordynamic-Performance-of-Smooth},
title={Prediction of rotordynamic performance of smooth stator-grooved
rotor liquid annular seals utilizing computational fluid dynamics},
author={Mortazavi, Farzam and Palazzolo, Alan}, journal={Journal of
Vibration and Acoustics}, volume={140}, number={3}, pages={031002},
year={2018}, publisher={American Society of Mechanical Engineers} }
@article{liu2018improved, url={https://arxiv.org/pdf/1807.00202.pdf},
title={Improved techniques for learning to dehaze and beyond: A
collective study}, author={Liu, Yu and Zhao, Guanlong and Gong, Boyuan
and Li, Yang and Raj, Ritu and Goel, Niraj and Kesav, Satya and
Gottimukkala, Sandeep and Wang, Zhangyang and Ren, Wenqi and others},
pages={1-6}, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:1807.00202}, year={2018} }
@article{fernando2016approach,
url={https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs12033-016-9979-1},
title={An approach for Zika virus inhibition using homology structure of
the envelope protein}, author={Fernando, Sandun and Fernando, Teshan and
Stefanik, Michal and Eyer, Ludek and Ruzek, Daniel}, journal={Molecular
biotechnology}, volume={58}, number={12}, pages={801--806}, year={2016},
publisher={Springer} } @article{beykal2020data,
url={https://aiche.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/aic.16657},
title={A data-driven optimization algorithm for differential algebraic
equations with numerical infeasibilities}, author={Beykal, Burcu and
Onel, Melis and Onel, Onur and Pistikopoulos, Efstratios N},
journal={AIChE Journal}, volume={66}, number={10}, pages={e16657},
year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@inproceedings{al2018performance,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=8604682},
title={The Performance of Suction Caissons for Floating Offshore Wind
Turbines under Inclined Cyclic Survival Loads}, author={Al-Ramthan,
Ahmed Qasim Obaid and Aubeny, Charles P}, booktitle={OCEANS 2018
MTS/IEEE Charleston}, pages={1--5}, year={2018}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{brady2021normalizing,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.062701},
url={https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.062701},
title={Normalizing Flows for Microscopic Many-Body Calculations: An
Application to the Nuclear Equation of State}, author={Brady, Jack and
Wen, Pengsheng and Holt, Jeremy W}, journal={Physical Review Letters},
volume={127}, number={6}, pages={062701}, year={2021}, publisher={APS} }
@article{hajiramezanali2018bayesian,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.09433}, title={Bayesian multi-domain
learning for cancer subtype discovery from next-generation sequencing
count data}, author={Hajiramezanali, Ehsan and Dadaneh, Siamak Zamani
and Karbalayghareh, Alireza and Zhou, Mingyuan and Qian, Xiaoning},
pages={1-13}, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:1810.09433}, year={2018} }
@inproceedings{davis2019write,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8916550}, title={Write quick,
run fast: Sparse deep neural network in 20 minutes of development time
via SuiteSparse: GraphBLAS}, author={Davis, Timothy A and Aznaveh,
Mohsen and Kolodziej, Scott}, booktitle={2019 IEEE High Performance
Extreme Computing Conference (HPEC)}, pages={1--6}, year={2019},
organization={IEEE} } @inproceedings{garza2019bit,
url={https://par.nsf.gov/servlets/purl/10126754}, title={Bit-level
perceptron prediction for indirect branches}, author={Garza, Elba and
Mirbagher-Ajorpaz, Samira and Khan, Tahsin Ahmad and Jimenez, Daniel A},
booktitle={2019 ACM/IEEE 46th Annual International Symposium on Computer
Architecture (ISCA)}, pages={27--38}, year={2019}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{seguin2016stacking,
url={https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27860103}, title={Stacking and
Electrostatic Interactions Drive the Stereoselectivity of Silylium-Ion
Asymmetric Counteranion-Directed Catalysis}, author={Seguin, Trevor J
and Wheeler, Steven E}, journal={Angewandte Chemie International
Edition}, volume={55}, number={51}, pages={15889--15893}, year={2016},
publisher={Wiley Online Library} } @phdthesis{shah2020accurate,
url={https://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/bitstream/handle/1969.1/188418/SHAH-FINALTHESIS-2021.pdf},
title={Accurate Identification of Traffic Signs Using Radar and Camera
Fusion}, author={Shah, Shrey}, year={2020} }
@article{nimmagadda2017enantioselective,
url={https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/anie.201611602},
title={Enantioselective synthesis of chiral oxime ethers:
Desymmetrization and dynamic kinetic resolution of substituted
cyclohexanones}, author={Nimmagadda, Sri Krishna and Mallojjala, Sharath
Chandra and Woztas, Lukasz and Wheeler, Steven E and Antilla, Jon C},
journal={Angewandte Chemie International Edition}, volume={56},
number={9}, pages={2454--2458}, year={2017}, publisher={Wiley Online
Library} } @article{zaheer2020reversible,
goi={https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsenergylett.0c01328},
title={Reversible Room-Temperature Fluoride-Ion Insertion in a
Tunnel-Structured Transition Metal Oxide Host}, author={Zaheer, Wasif
and Andrews, Justin L and Parija, Abhishek and Hyler, Forrest P and
Jaye, Cherno and Weiland, Conan and Yu, Young-Sang and Shapiro, David A
and Fischer, Daniel A and Guo, Jinghua and others}, journal={ACS Energy
Letters}, volume={5}, number={8}, pages={2520--2526}, year={2020},
publisher={ACS Publications} } @article{brdar2021axionlike,
url={https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.201801},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.201801}, title={Axionlike
Particles at Future Neutrino Experiments: Closing the Cosmological
Triangle}, author={Brdar, Vedran and Dutta, Bhaskar and Jang, Wooyoung
and Kim, Doojin and Shoemaker, Ian M and Tabrizi, Zahra and Thompson,
Adrian and Yu, Jaehoon}, journal={Physical Review Letters},
volume={126}, number={20}, pages={201801}, year={2021}, publisher={APS}
} @inproceedings{tiugli2018case,
url={https://www.scientific.net/MSF.915.185.pdf}, title={A case study on
metal-ceramic interfaces: wetting of alumina by molten aluminum},
author={Tigli, Ahmet and Cagin, Tahir}, booktitle={Materials Science
Forum}, volume={915}, pages={185--189}, year={2018}, organization={Trans
Tech Publ} } @article{liang2020perovskite,
url={https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/adma.202004111},
title={Perovskite-Derivative Valleytronics}, author={Liang, Jia and
Fang, Qiyi and Wang, Hua and Xu, Rui and Jia, Shuai and Guan, Yuxuan and
Ai, Qing and Gao, Guanhui and Guo, Hua and Shen, Kaijun and others},
journal={Advanced Materials}, volume={32}, number={48}, pages={2004111},
year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@inproceedings{aslan2018influence,
url={https://www.scientific.net/MSF.915.224}, title={Influence of
H-Content on Thermo-Mechanical Properties of NiAl Alloys},
author={Aslan, Ugur and Cagin, Tahir}, booktitle={Materials Science
Forum}, volume={915}, pages={224--228}, year={2018}, organization={Trans
Tech Publ} } @inproceedings{bhatia2019perceptron,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8980306},
title={Perceptron-based prefetch filtering}, author={Bhatia, Eshan and
Chacon, Gino and Pugsley, Seth and Teran, Elvira and Gratz, Paul V and
Jimenez, Daniel A}, booktitle={2019 ACM/IEEE 46th Annual International
Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA)}, pages={1--13}, year={2019},
organization={IEEE} } @techreport{shayit2021vacuum,
url={https://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/handle/1969.1/194332},
title={Vacuum energy density and pressure inside a soft wall},
author={Shayit, Agam and Fulling, SA and Settlemyre, TE and Merritt,
Joseph}, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.10439}, year={2021} }
@article{kordell2020first, url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2009.03512},
title={First results from Hybrid Hadronization in small and large
systems}, pages={1--5}, author={Kordell II, Michael and Angerami, A and
Bass, SA and Cao, S and Chen, Y and Coleman, J and Cunqueiro, L and Dai,
T and Du, L and Ehlers, R and others}, journal={arXiv preprint
arXiv:2009.03512}, year={2020} } @article{rossi2018light,
url={https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.8b06649},
title={Light-induced activation of forbidden exciton transition in
strongly confined perovskite quantum dots}, author={Rossi, Daniel and
Wang, Hua and Dong, Yitong and Qiao, Tian and Qian, Xiaofeng and Son,
Dong Hee}, journal={ACS nano}, volume={12}, number={12},
pages={12436--12443}, year={2018}, publisher={ACS Publications} }
@article{gober2020temporal,
url={https://research.ece.ncsu.edu/ipc/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/tap_final.pdf},
title={Temporal ancestry prefetcher}, pages={1--5}, author={Gober,
Nathan and Chacon, Gino and Jimenez, DA and Gratz, P}, journal={The 1st
Instruction Prefetching Championship (IPC1)}, year={2020} }
@article{bedre2019genfam,
url={https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31844835/}, title={GenFam: A web
application and database for gene family-based classification and
functional enrichment analysis}, author={Bedre, Renesh and Mandadi,
Kranthi}, journal={Plant direct}, volume={3}, number={12},
pages={e00191}, year={2019}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@article{hiokiinfluence,
url={https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwj32JeMxK_1AhWEZd8KHakTC1AQFnoECAsQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fams.confex.com%2Fams%2F96Annual%2Fwebprogram%2FManuscript%2FPaper290825%2Fams_2016spring_extended_abstract_v06.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0PN4rZpW5rLR8_5U5Fs2Qm},
title={The Influence of Spatial Resolution on the Inference of Ice Cloud
Particle Morphological Parameters from Multi-angle Satellite
Observations}, pages={1-3}, author={Hioki, Souichiro and Yang, Ping},
year={2016}, } @article{shan2020surface,
url={https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2019GL086050},
title={Surface heat flux induced by mesoscale eddies cools the
Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension region}, author={Shan, Xuan and Jing, Zhao
and Gan, Bolan and Wu, Lixin and Chang, Ping and Ma, Xiaohui and Wang,
Shengpeng and Chen, Zhaohui and Yang, Haiyuan}, journal={Geophysical
Research Letters}, volume={47}, number={1}, pages={e2019GL086050},
year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@article{murray2020macrolide,
url={https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31883125},
title={Macrolide-susceptible probiotic Enterococcus faecium ST296
exhibits faecal-environmental-oral microbial community cycling among
beef cattle in feedlots}, author={Murray, SA and Holbert, AC and Norman,
KN and Lawhon, Sara D and Sawyer, JE and Scott, HM}, journal={Letters in
applied microbiology}, volume={70}, number={4}, pages={274--281},
year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@article{pi2020convolutional,
url={https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1474034619305828},
title={Convolutional neural networks for object detection in aerial
imagery for disaster response and recovery}, author={Pi, Yalong and
Nath, Nipun D and Behzadan, Amir H}, journal={Advanced Engineering
Informatics}, volume={43}, pages={101009}, year={2020},
publisher={Elsevier} } @article{jin2018hybrid,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.07866}, title={Hybrid macro/micro level
backpropagation for training deep spiking neural networks},
pages={1-12}, author={Jin, Yingyezhe and Zhang, Wenrui and Li, Peng},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:1805.07866}, year={2018} }
@article{jochum2019bioprospecting,
url={https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6747002},
title={Bioprospecting plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria that mitigate
drought stress in grasses}, author={Jochum, Michael D and McWilliams,
Kelsey L and Borrego, Eli J and Kolomiets, Mike V and Niu, Genhua and
Pierson, Elizabeth A and Jo, Young-Ki}, journal={Frontiers in
microbiology}, volume={10}, pages={2106}, year={2019},
publisher={Frontiers} } @article{https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202105830,
url = {https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34014019}, author = {Chen, Yu and
Yang, Yuqin and Orr, Asuka A. and Makam, Pandeeswar and Redko, Boris and
Haimov, Elvira and Wang, Yannan and Shimon, Linda J. W. and
Rencus-Lazar, Sigal and Ju, Meiting and Tamamis, Phanourios and Dong,
Hao and Gazit, Ehud}, title = {Self-Assembled Peptide
Nano-Superstructure towards Enzyme Mimicking Hydrolysis}, journal =
{Angewandte Chemie International Edition}, volume = {60}, number = {31},
pages = {17164-17170}, keywords = {biocatalysis, nano-superstructure,
peptide, self-assembly, supramolecular chemistry}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202105830}, url =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/anie.202105830}, eprint
= {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/anie.202105830},
abstract = {Abstract The structural arrangement of amino acid residues
in native enzymes underlies their remarkable catalytic properties, thus
providing a notable point of reference for designing potent yet simple
biomimetic catalysts. Herein, we describe a minimalistic approach to
construct a dipeptide-based nano-superstructure with enzyme-like
activity. The self-assembled biocatalyst comprises one peptide as a
single building block, readily synthesized from histidine. Through
coordination with zinc ion, the peptide self-assembly procedure allows
the formation of supramolecular β-sheet ordered nanocrystals, which can
be used as basic units to further construct higher-order superstructure.
As a result, remarkable hydrolysis activity and enduring stability are
demonstrated. Our work exemplifies the use of a bioinspired
supramolecular assembly approach to develop next-generation biocatalysts
for biotechnological applications.}, year = {2021} }
@article{D1CC00574J, author ="Kuai, Dacheng and Cheng, Heyong and Kuan,
Kai-Yuan and Yan, Xin", title ="Accelerated five-component
spiro-pyrrolidine construction at the air–liquid interface", journal
="Chem. Commun.", year ="2021", volume ="57", issue ="31", pages
="3757-3760", publisher ="The Royal Society of Chemistry", doi
="10.1039/D1CC00574J", url ="http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/D1CC00574J",
abstract ="Multi-component reactions assemble complex molecules in a
highly effective way{,} however{,} they often suffer from long reaction
times. We demonstrate that acceleration of a five-component
spiro-pyrrolidine construction can be achieved in microdroplets and thin
films. The deposition method and mild heating are crucial factors for
product formation. Three key intermediates were captured by mass
spectrometry to elucidate the tandem reaction mechanism. We also found
that hydrogen bonding can significantly flatten the energy barrier at
the air–liquid interface." } @article{doi:10.1021/jacs.0c05610, author =
{Song, Yue and Yang, Xin and Shen, Yidan and Dong, Mei and Lin, Yen-Nan
and Hall, Michael B. and Wooley, Karen L.}, title = {Invoking Side-Chain
Functionality for the Mediation of Regioselectivity during Ring-Opening
Polymerization of Glucose Carbonates}, journal = {Journal of the
American Chemical Society}, volume = {142}, number = {40}, pages =
{16974-16981}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1021/jacs.0c05610}, note ={PMID:
32965109}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c05610}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c05610} }
@article{doi:10.1061/ASCEST.1943-541X.0003204, author = {Eric Stoddard
and Matthew Yarnold}, title = {Residual Stress and Global Deflection
Limits for Future Hot-Rolled Steel Asymmetric I-Beams}, journal =
{Journal of Structural Engineering}, volume = {148}, number = {1}, pages
= {04021232}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1061/(ASCE)ST.1943-541X.0003204},
url =
{https://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/%28ASCE%29ST.1943-541X.0003204},
eprint =
{https://ascelibrary.org/doi/pdf/10.1061/%28ASCE%29ST.1943-541X.0003204},
abstract = { Medium-span to long-span floor systems in residential and
commercial construction have commonly used steel–concrete composite
construction. These composite floor systems have become more
structurally efficient with the use of built-up asymmetric steel beam
sections. Although structural efficiency is important, a fast and
cost-effective solution is paramount. The research presented herein is
being conducted for the AISC on hot-rolled asymmetric I-beams (A-shapes)
for potential future addition to the AISC Steel Construction Manual. The
aim is to adequately proportion these hot-rolled shapes so they match or
improve built-up asymmetric beam structural efficiency while increasing
the speed and economy of steel–concrete composite floor systems. The
initial focus has been placed on steel behavior as a result of the
manufacturing process, where residual stresses and deformations can be
an issue due to uneven cooling. A better understanding of residual
stresses is critical for accurate calculation of the lateral torsional
buckling strength during deck casting and placement. In addition, steel
mills have expressed concern regarding global deformation of an
asymmetric I-shape. As a result, an extensive thermomechanical
finite-element modeling approach, using nonlinear thermomechanical
properties of steel, was devised to simulate the cooling process of
hot-rolled steel shapes. A single model requires up to 50 h of
processing time using the Texas A&M high-performance computing
center. The modeling procedure was validated against accepted residual
stress experimental test measurements. Proof-of-concept (POC) A-shape
beams were also produced by Nucor. The POC beam cooling profiles were
used as further validation. Then, a parametric study was executed that
individually altered the top flange width and thickness of two
different-depth W-shapes. The parametric study identified a maximum
flange width-to-thickness ratio to satisfy a reasonable residual
compressive stress limit. The study also found that, despite concerns,
global deformations are not an issue for realistic proportions of future
hot-rolled asymmetric I-beams.} } @article{doi:10.1021/acsomega.0c05519,
author = {Grajales, Javier A. and Pérez, Lisa M. and Schwab, A. Paul and
Little, Dallas N.}, title = {Quantum Chemical Modeling of the Effects of
Hydrated Lime (Calcium Hydroxide) as a Filler in Bituminous Materials},
journal = {ACS Omega}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {3130-3139},
year = {2021}, doi = {10.1021/acsomega.0c05519}, note ={PMID: 33553929},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c05519}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c05519} }
@article{doi:10.1021/acsnano.9b10024, author = {Chen, Yu and Orr, Asuka
A. and Tao, Kai and Wang, Zhibin and Ruggiero, Antonella and Shimon,
Linda J. W. and Schnaider, Lee and Goodall, Alicia and Rencus-Lazar,
Sigal and Gilead, Sharon and Slutsky, Inna and Tamamis, Phanourios and
Tan, Zhan’ao and Gazit, Ehud}, title = {High-Efficiency Fluorescence
through Bioinspired Supramolecular Self-Assembly}, journal = {ACS Nano},
volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {2798-2807}, year = {2020}, doi =
{10.1021/acsnano.9b10024}, note ={PMID: 32013408}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.9b10024}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.9b10024} }
@inproceedings{hajiramezanali2020variational,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.09710}, title={Variational Graph
Recurrent Neural Networks}, author={Ehsan Hajiramezanali and Arman
Hasanzadeh and Nick Duffield and Krishna R Narayanan and Mingyuan Zhou
and Xiaoning Qian}, year={2020}, pages={1-11}, eprint={1908.09710},
archivePrefix={arXiv}, primaryClass={cs.LG} } @article{nathmulti,
url={https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/MULTI-DIMENSIONAL-SEQUENCE-ALIGNMENT-FOR-HUMAN-OF-Nath-Behzadan/ea912149dc1cd4da2f8fb86300f7024bd3e95e8b},
title={MULTI-DIMENSIONAL SEQUENCE ALIGNMENT FOR CONTEXT-AWARE HUMAN
ACTION ANALYSIS OF BODY-SENSOR DATA}, pages={61-68}, year={2019},
author={Nath, Nipun D and Behzadan, Amir H and Shrestha, Prabhat} }
@article{yang2021computational,
url={https://asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/tribology/article/143/1/011801/1085121/Computational-Fluid-Dynamics-Based-Mixing},
title={Computational fluid dynamics based mixing prediction for tilt pad
journal bearing TEHD modeling—Part I: TEHD-CFD model validation and
improvements}, author={Yang, Jongin and Palazzolo, Alan},
journal={Journal of Tribology}, volume={143}, number={1},
pages={011801}, year={2021}, publisher={American Society of Mechanical
Engineers} } @article{tapia2017bayesian,
doi={doi.org/10.1115/1.4035898}, title={Bayesian calibration and
uncertainty quantification for a physics-based precipitation model of
nickel--titanium shape-memory alloys}, author={Tapia, Gustavo and
Johnson, Luke and Franco, Brian and Karayagiz, Kubra and Ma, Ji and
Arroyave, Raymundo and Karaman, Ibrahim and Elwany, Alaa}, pages={1-13},
journal={Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering},
volume={139}, number={7}, year={2017}, publisher={American Society of
Mechanical Engineers Digital Collection} } @article{yang2019three,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4043350}, title={Three-dimensional
thermo-elasto-hydrodynamic computational fluid dynamics model of a
tilting pad journal bearing—Part II: Dynamic response}, author={Yang,
Jongin and Palazzolo, Alan}, pages={1-16}, journal={Journal of
Tribology}, volume={141}, number={6}, year={2019}, publisher={American
Society of Mechanical Engineers Digital Collection} }
@article{ma2016western, doi={https://doi.org/10.1038/nature18640},
title={Western boundary currents regulated by interaction between ocean
eddies and the atmosphere}, author={Ma, Xiaohui and Jing, Zhao and
Chang, Ping and Liu, Xue and Montuoro, Raffaele and Small, R Justin and
Bryan, Frank O and Greatbatch, Richard J and Brandt, Peter and Wu,
Dexing and others}, journal={Nature}, volume={535}, number={7613},
pages={533--537}, year={2016}, publisher={Nature Publishing Group} }
@article{wang2017giant,
url={https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b02268},
title={Giant optical second harmonic generation in two-dimensional
multiferroics}, author={Wang, Hua and Qian, Xiaofeng}, journal={Nano
letters}, volume={17}, number={8}, pages={5027--5034}, year={2017},
publisher={ACS Publications} } @article{rahmani2020methane,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1002/qua.26065}, title={Methane dehydrogenation
on Cu and Ni surfaces with low and moderate oxygen coverage},
author={Rahmani Didar, Behnaz and Balbuena, Perla B},
journal={International Journal of Quantum Chemistry}, volume={120},
number={2}, pages={e26065}, year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online
Library} } @inproceedings{szafranski2019studying,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1190/segam2019-3216344.1}, title={Studying
stress state and fault zone properties of source regions of induced
seismicity using dynamic rupture models}, author={Szafranski, Dawid and
Duan, Benchun}, pages={2099-2103}, booktitle={SEG International
Exposition and Annual Meeting}, year={2019}, organization={OnePetro} }
@article{hsieh2018applying,
doi={https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2018.00588}, title={Applying a global
sensitivity analysis workflow to improve the computational efficiencies
in physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling}, author={Hsieh,
Nan-Hung and Reisfeld, Brad and Bois, Frederic Y and Chiu, Weihsueh A},
journal={Frontiers in pharmacology}, volume={9}, pages={588},
year={2018}, publisher={Frontiers} } @inproceedings{gardner2019loss,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=8785369},
title={Loss breakdown of a dual conical rotor permanent magnet motor
using grain oriented electrical steel and soft magnetic composites},
author={Gardner, Matthew C and Zhang, Yichi and Talebi, Dorsa and
Toliyat, Hamid A and Crapo, Alan and Knauer, Paul and Willis, Harold},
booktitle={2019 IEEE International Electric Machines & Drives
Conference (IEMDC)}, pages={1067--1074}, year={2019},
organization={IEEE} } @inproceedings{wu2018deep,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/1806.09228}, title={Deep k-means: Re-training
and parameter sharing with harder cluster assignments for compressing
deep convolutions}, author={Wu, Junru and Wang, Yue and Wu, Zhenyu and
Wang, Zhangyang and Veeraraghavan, Ashok and Lin, Yingyan},
booktitle={International Conference on Machine Learning},
pages={5363--5372}, year={2018}, organization={PMLR} }
@inproceedings{hajiramezanali2020semi,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9053491}, title={Semi-implicit
stochastic recurrent neural networks}, author={Hajiramezanali, Ehsan and
Hasanzadeh, Arman and Duffield, Nick and Narayanan, Krishna and Zhou,
Mingyuan and Qian, Xiaoning}, booktitle={ICASSP 2020-2020 IEEE
International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing
(ICASSP)}, pages={3342-3346}, year={2020}, organization={IEEE} }
@inproceedings{lim2016automated,
url={https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28269722}, title={Automated
neurovascular tracing and analysis of the knife-edge scanning microscope
rat nissl data set using a computing cluster}, author={Lim, Sungjun and
Nowak, Michael R and Choe, Yoonsuck}, booktitle={2016 38th Annual
International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology
Society (EMBC)}, pages={6445--6448}, year={2016}, organization={IEEE} }
@inproceedings{syed2019averaging,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/BigData47090.2019.9006183},
title={Averaging ensembles model for forecasting of short-term load in
smart grids}, author={Syed, Dabeeruddin and Refaat, Shady S and Abu-Rub,
Haitham and Bouhali, Othmane and Zainab, Ameema and Xie, Le},
booktitle={2019 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data)},
pages={2931--2938}, year={2019}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{praslicka2021review,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/JESTPE.2021.3053544}, title={Review and
analysis of coaxial magnetic gear pole pair count selection effects},
pages={1-10}, author={Praslicka, Bryton and Gardner, Matthew C and
Johnson, Matthew and Toliyat, Hamid A}, journal={IEEE Journal of
Emerging and Selected Topics in Power Electronics}, year={2021},
publisher={IEEE} } @inproceedings{naghavi2021permanent,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2108.08346}, title={Permanent Magnet Linear
Generator Design for Surface Riding Wave Energy Converters},
author={Naghavi, Farid and Sheshaprasad, Shrikesh and Gardner, Matthew
and Meduri, Aghamarshana and Kang, HeonYong and Toliyat, Hamid},
booktitle={2021 IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition (ECCE)},
pages={4369--4375}, year={2021}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{gorzelnik2016asymmetric,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1609482113}, title={Asymmetric cryo-EM
structure of the canonical Allolevivirus Qβ reveals a single maturation
protein and the genomic ssRNA in situ}, author={Gorzelnik, Karl V and
Cui, Zhicheng and Reed, Catrina A and Jakana, Joanita and Young, Ry and
Zhang, Junjie}, journal={Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences}, volume={113}, number={41}, pages={11519--11524}, year={2016},
publisher={National Acad Sciences} } @inproceedings{pi2020disaster,
url={https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Disaster-Impact-Information-Retrieval-Using-Deep-in-Pi-Nath/cfad820459c1a246e6bce7cf0d72fabba5766f09},
title={Disaster impact information retrieval using deep learning object
detection in crowdsourced drone footage}, author={Pi, Yalong and Nath,
Nipun D and Behzadan, Amir H}, booktitle={Proc., Int. Workshop on
Intelligent Computing in Engineering}, pages={134--143}, year={2020} }
@inproceedings{doi:10.1061/9780784483404.023, author = {Junho Lee and
Charles P. Aubeny }, title = {Effect of Keying Flaps on a Multiline Ring
Anchor in Soft Clay}, booktitle = {IFCEE 2021}, year = {2021}, chapter =
{}, pages = {249-256}, doi = {10.1061/9780784483404.023}, url =
{https://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/9780784483404.023}, eprint =
{https://ascelibrary.org/doi/pdf/10.1061/9780784483404.023}, abstract =
{ The multiline ring anchor (MRA) was devised as a cost-effective means
for securing floating offshore wind turbines (FOWTs) to the seabed.
FOWTs occurring in arrays create the possibility for attaching mooring
lines from multiple units to a single anchor. Additionally, the deep
embedment of the MRA into relatively strong soil permits high load
capacity to be achievable with a small and lighter anchor, thereby
reducing anchor material, transport, and installation costs. However,
since the MRA is shorter than a conventional caisson, features such as
wing plates and keying flaps are needed to achieve parity in load
capacity with a caisson having a comparable diameter. Preliminary
studies show that attaching wing plates to MRA in soft clay is highly
effective in enhancing its horizontal load capacity, but only marginally
effective in improving vertical load capacity. This motivated the
current study investigating the use of keying flaps to further enhance
vertical load capacity. Two-dimensional finite element analyses were
conducted to understand how keying flaps impact the failure mechanism of
the stiffeners and provide reliable evaluations of the uplift resistance
of the MRA. The results show that the thickness of the stiffener, flap
length, and flap angle can affect the failure mechanism and bearing
factors. For the optimal design of the stiffener, a comparative study
was carried out to compare the effects of keying flaps and thickness of
the stiffener. The studies show that introducing keying flaps can have
comparable load capacity with thicker stiffeners and that it can be an
economical solution for achieving high vertical load capacity while
containing material and fabrication costs. } }
@inproceedings{hasanpour2021design,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/SDEMPED51010.2021.9605546}, title={Design
and Control of a Fault Tolerant Permanent Magnet Motor with
Independently Optimized Phase and Pole Counts}, author={Hasanpour, Shima
and Sheshaprasad, Shrikesh and Gardner, Matthew C and Johnson, Matthew
and Praslicka, Bryton and Toliyat, Hamid A}, booktitle={2021 IEEE 13th
International Symposium on Diagnostics for Electrical Machines, Power
Electronics and Drives (SDEMPED)}, volume={1}, pages={58--64},
year={2021}, organization={IEEE} } @article{zhou2018modelling,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1080/17452759.2018.1442681}, title={Modelling
and estimation of tensile behaviour of polylactic acid parts
manufactured by fused deposition modelling using finite element analysis
and knowledge-based library}, author={Zhou, Xunfei and Hsieh, Sheng-Jen
and Ting, Chen-Ching}, journal={Virtual and Physical Prototyping},
volume={13}, number={3}, pages={177--190}, year={2018},
publisher={Taylor & Francis} } @article{blanchette2020bayesian,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfaa151}, title={A bayesian method
for population-wide cardiotoxicity hazard and risk characterization
using an in vitro human model}, author={Blanchette, Alexander D and
Burnett, Sarah D and Grimm, Fabian A and Rusyn, Ivan and Chiu, Weihsueh
A}, journal={Toxicological Sciences}, volume={178}, number={2},
pages={391--403}, year={2020}, publisher={Oxford University Press} }
@article{mulgaonkar2020bcr,
url={https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2020/08/18/2020.06.18.158196.full.pdf},
title={Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib as a potential drug
for COVID-19}, author={Mulgaonkar, Nirmitee Sanjay and Wang, Haoqi and
Mallawarachchi, Samavath and Ruzek, Daniel and Martina, Byron and
Fernando, Sandun}, pages={1--15}, journal={bioRxiv}, year={2020},
publisher={Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory} } @article{hasanzadeh2019semi,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.07078}, title={Semi-implicit graph
variational auto-encoders}, pages={1-12}, author={Hasanzadeh, Arman and
Hajiramezanali, Ehsan and Duffield, Nick and Narayanan, Krishna R and
Zhou, Mingyuan and Qian, Xiaoning}, journal={arXiv preprint
arXiv:1908.07078}, year={2019} } @inproceedings{ardywibowo2020nads,
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.06646}, title={Nads: Neural architecture
distribution search for uncertainty awareness}, author={Ardywibowo,
Randy and Boluki, Shahin and Gong, Xinyu and Wang, Zhangyang and Qian,
Xiaoning}, booktitle={International Conference on Machine Learning},
pages={356--366}, year={2020}, organization={PMLR} }
@article{nath2020deep, doi={https://doi.org/10.3389/fbuil.2020.00097},
title={Deep convolutional networks for construction object detection
under different visual conditions}, author={Nath, Nipun D and Behzadan,
Amir H}, journal={Frontiers in Built Environment}, volume={6},
pages={97}, year={2020}, publisher={Frontiers} }
@article{iino2020optimizing, doi={https://doi.org/10.2118/190304-PA},
title={Optimizing CO2-and field-gas-injection EOR in unconventional
reservoirs using the fast-marching method}, author={Iino, Atsushi and
Onishi, Tsubasa and Datta-Gupta, Akhil}, journal={SPE Reservoir
Evaluation & Engineering}, volume={23}, number={01},
pages={261--281}, year={2020}, publisher={OnePetro} }
@article{vashisth2019mechanical,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1039/C9NR00958B}, title={Mechanical size effects
of amorphous polymer-derived ceramics at the nanoscale: experiments and
ReaxFF simulations}, author={Vashisth, Aniruddh and Khatri, Sumit and
Hahn, Seung Ho and Zhang, Weiwei and Van Duin, Adri CT and Naraghi,
Mohammad}, journal={Nanoscale}, volume={11}, number={15},
pages={7447--7456}, year={2019}, publisher={Royal Society of Chemistry}
} @inproceedings{syed2020performance,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/KI48306.2020.9039797}, title={Performance
evaluation of distributed machine learning for load forecasting in smart
grids}, author={Syed, Dabeeruddin and Refaat, Shady S and Abu-Rub,
Haitham}, booktitle={2020 Cybernetics & Informatics (K&I)},
pages={1--6}, year={2020}, organization={IEEE} } @article{tao2021edta,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1039/D1TA03985G}, title={EDTA-mimicking amino
acid--metal ion coordination for multifunctional packings}, author={Tao,
Kai and Orr, Asuka A and Hu, Wen and Makam, Pandeeswar and Zhang, Jiahao
and Geng, Qiang and Li, Boxin and Jakubowski, Joseph M and Wang,
Yancheng and Tamamis, Phanourios and others}, journal={Journal of
Materials Chemistry A}, volume={9}, number={36}, pages={20385--20394},
year={2021}, publisher={Royal Society of Chemistry} }
@article{tao2020enhanced, doi={https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.201909614},
title={Enhanced Fluorescence for Bioassembly by Environment-Switching
Doping of Metal Ions}, author={Tao, Kai and Chen, Yu and Orr, Asuka A
and Tian, Zhen and Makam, Pandeeswar and Gilead, Sharon and Si, Mingsu
and Rencus-Lazar, Sigal and Qu, Songnan and Zhang, Mingjun and others},
journal={Advanced functional materials}, volume={30}, number={10},
pages={1909614}, year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@inproceedings{praslicka2021practical,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/IEMDC47953.2021.9449504}, title={Practical
Analysis and Design of a 50: 1 Cycloidal Magnetic Gear with Balanced
Off-Axis Moments and a High Specific Torque for Lunar Robots},
author={Praslicka, Bryton and Johnson, Matthew and Zamarron, Daniel and
Marshall, Avery and Hasanpour, Shima and Gardner, Matthew C and Nguyen,
Alex and Goodarzi, Abas and Bauk, Enzo and Toliyat, Hamid A},
booktitle={2021 IEEE International Electric Machines & Drives
Conference (IEMDC)}, pages={1--8}, year={2021}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{demirhan2019sustainable,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1002/aic.16498}, title={Sustainable ammonia
production through process synthesis and global optimization},
author={Demirhan, C Doga and Tso, William W and Powell, Joseph B and
Pistikopoulos, Efstratios N}, journal={AIChE Journal}, volume={65},
number={7}, pages={e16498}, year={2019}, publisher={Wiley Online
Library} } @article{yang2021computational,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4047751}, title={Computational fluid
dynamics based mixing prediction for tilt pad journal bearing TEHD
modeling—Part II: Implementation with machine learning}, author={Yang,
Jongin and Palazzolo, Alan}, journal={Journal of Tribology},
volume={143}, number={1}, pages={011802}, year={2021},
publisher={American Society of Mechanical Engineers} }
@inproceedings{haq2019effectiveness,
url={https://dl.astfe.org/conferences/tfec2019,482783b20ce88b27,4c5489b33ebe9605.html},
title={Effectiveness of Micro-Droplet Train and Micro-Jet Impingement in
Surface Cooling}, author={Haq, Syed and Muthusamy, Jayaveera Pandian and
Zhang, Taolue and Alvarado, Jorge L}, pages={1}, booktitle={ASTFE
Digital Library}, year={2019}, organization={Begel House Inc.} }
@inproceedings{nath2020deep,
url={https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/9780784482865.020}, title={Deep
Learning Detection of Personal Protective Equipment to Maintain Safety
Compliance on Construction Sites}, author={Nath, Nipun D and Behzadan,
Amir H}, booktitle={Construction Research Congress 2020: Computer
Applications}, pages={181--190}, year={2020}, organization={American
Society of Civil Engineers Reston, VA} } @article{chandelia2018fem,
url={https://www.proquest.com/docview/2281302726?pq-origsite=gscholar&fromopenview=true},
title={FEM modeling on scratch behavior of multiphase polymeric
systems}, author={Chandelia, Vijay Kisan and Sue, Hung-Jue and Hossain,
Mohammad Motaher}, journal={Tribology Letters}, volume={66}, number={2},
pages={1--16}, year={2018}, publisher={Springer} }
@inproceedings{talebi2021electromagnetic,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/IEMDC47953.2021.9449611},
title={Electromagnetic Design Characterization of a Dual Rotor Axial
Flux Motor for Electric Aircraft}, author={Talebi, Dorsa and Gardner,
Matthew C and Sankarraman, Sri Vignesh and Daniar, Ahmad and Toliyat,
Hamid A}, booktitle={2021 IEEE International Electric Machines &
Drives Conference (IEMDC)}, pages={1--8}, year={2021},
organization={IEEE} } @article{yruegas2021nickel,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c01845},
title={Nickel--Borolide Complexes and Their Complex Electronic
Structure}, author={Yruegas, Sam and Tang, Hao and Bornovski, Gayle Z
and Su, Xiaojun and Sung, Siyoung and Hall, Michael B and Nippe, Michael
and Martin, Caleb D}, journal={Inorganic Chemistry}, volume={60},
number={21}, pages={16160--16167}, year={2021}, publisher={ACS
Publications} } @article{foquet2020there,
doi={https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9618}, title={There is no magic
bullet: the importance of testing reference gene stability in RT-qPCR
experiments across multiple closely related species}, author={Foquet,
Bert and Song, Hojun}, journal={PeerJ}, volume={8}, pages={e9618},
year={2020}, publisher={PeerJ Inc.} } @article{xing2018simulatecnvs,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1101/407486}, title={SimulateCNVs: a novel
software application for simulating CNVs in WES and WGS data},
author={Xing, Yue and Dabney, Alan R and Li, Xiao and Casola, Claudio},
journal={BioRxiv}, pages={407486}, year={2018}, publisher={Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory} } @article{https://doi.org/10.1111/mice.12658, author
= {Cheng, Chih-Shen and Behzadan, Amir H. and Noshadravan, Arash}, title
= {Deep learning for post-hurricane aerial damage assessment of
buildings}, journal = {Computer-Aided Civil and Infrastructure
Engineering}, volume = {36}, number = {6}, pages = {695-710}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1111/mice.12658}, url =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/mice.12658}, eprint =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/mice.12658}, abstract =
{Abstract This study aims to improve post-disaster preliminary damage
assessment (PDA) using artificial intelligence (AI) and unmanned aerial
vehicle (UAV) imagery. In particular, a stacked convolutional neural
network (CNN) architecture is introduced and trained on an in-house
visual dataset from Hurricane Dorian. To account for the ordinality of
damage level classes, the cross-entropy classification loss function is
replaced with the square of earth mover's distance (EMD2) loss. The
trained model achieves 65.6\% building localization precision and 61\%
(90\% considering ±1 class deviation from ground-truth) classification
accuracy. It also exhibits a positive accuracy–confidence correlation,
which is valuable for model assessment in situations where ground-truth
information is not readily available. Finally, the outcome of damage
assessment is compared with the literature by examining the relationship
between building size and number of stories, and severity of induced
disaster damage.}, year = {2021} } @article{dadaneh2018bayesian,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bty808}, title={Bayesian
negative binomial regression for differential expression with
confounding factors}, author={Dadaneh, Siamak Zamani and Zhou, Mingyuan
and Qian, Xiaoning}, journal={Bioinformatics}, volume={34}, number={19},
pages={3349--3356}, year={2018}, publisher={Oxford University Press} }
@article{taghizadeh2020turbulence,
url={https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1367-2630/abadb3},
title={Turbulence closure modeling with data-driven techniques: physical
compatibility and consistency considerations}, author={Taghizadeh, Salar
and Witherden, Freddie D and Girimaji, Sharath S}, journal={New Journal
of Physics}, volume={22}, number={9}, pages={093023}, year={2020},
publisher={IOP Publishing} } @article{chu2017rna,
url={https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-16603-y}, title={RNA-seq
of serial kidney biopsies obtained during progression of chronic kidney
disease from dogs with X-linked hereditary nephropathy}, author={Chu,
Candice P and Hokamp, Jessica A and Cianciolo, Rachel E and Dabney, Alan
R and Brinkmeyer-Langford, Candice and Lees, George E and Nabity, Mary
B}, journal={Scientific reports}, volume={7}, number={1}, pages={1--14},
year={2017}, publisher={Nature Publishing Group} }
@article{kiani2018fatigue, doi={https://doi.org/10.1111/ffe.12697},
title={Fatigue analysis of railway wheel using a multiaxial strain-based
critical-plane index}, author={Kiani, M and Fry, GT}, journal={Fatigue
& Fracture of Engineering Materials & Structures}, volume={41},
number={2}, pages={412--424}, year={2018}, publisher={Wiley Online
Library} } @article{morris2021differences,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252804}, title={Differences
in the genome, methylome, and transcriptome do not differentiate
isolates of Streptococcus equi subsp. equi from horses with acute
clinical signs from isolates of inapparent carriers}, author={Morris,
Ellen Ruth A and Boyle, Ashley G and Riihimaki, Miia and Aspan, Anna and
Anis, Eman and Hillhouse, Andrew E and Ivanov, Ivan and Bordin, Angela I
and Pringle, John and Cohen, Noah D}, journal={Plos one}, volume={16},
number={6}, pages={e0252804}, year={2021}, publisher={Public Library of
Science San Francisco, CA USA} } @article{thyng2021performance,
doi={https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-14-391-2021}, title={Performance of
offline passive tracer advection in the Regional Ocean Modeling System
(ROMS; v3. 6, revision 904)}, author={Thyng, Kristen M and Kobashi,
Daijiro and Ruiz-Xomchuk, Veronica and Qu, Lixin and Chen, Xu and
Hetland, Robert D}, journal={Geoscientific Model Development},
volume={14}, number={1}, pages={391--407}, year={2021},
publisher={Copernicus GmbH} } @article{li2019large,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2018.10.069},
title={Large eddy simulations of the turbulent flows of twin parallel
jets}, author={Li, Han and Anand, NK and Hassan, Yassin A and Nguyen,
Thien}, journal={International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer},
volume={129}, pages={1263--1273}, year={2019}, publisher={Elsevier} }
@article{laconsay2020modulating,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.0c02578}, title={Modulating
Stereoselectivity through Electrostatic Interactions in a
SPINOL-Phosphoric Acid-Catalyzed Synthesis of 2,
3-Dihydroquinazolinones}, author={Laconsay, Croix J and Seguin, Trevor J
and Wheeler, Steven E}, journal={ACS Catalysis}, volume={10},
number={20}, pages={12292--12299}, year={2020}, publisher={ACS
Publications} } @article{al2020numerical,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)GM.1943-5622.0001650},
title={Numerical investigation of the performance of caissons in
cohesive soils under cyclic loading}, author={Al-Ramthan, Ahmed Qasim
Obaid and Aubeny, Charles P}, journal={International Journal of
Geomechanics}, volume={20}, number={5}, pages={04020042}, year={2020},
publisher={American Society of Civil Engineers} }
@inproceedings{gardner2019performance,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/ECCE.2019.8912286}, title={Performance
impacts of practical fabrication tradeoffs for a radial flux coaxial
magnetic gear with Halbach arrays and air cores}, author={Gardner,
Matthew C and Johnson, Matthew and Toliyat, Hamid A}, booktitle={2019
IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition (ECCE)},
pages={3129--3136}, year={2019}, organization={IEEE} }
@inproceedings{chaudhary2019simultaneous,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/ASMC.2019.8791764}, title={Simultaneous
denoising and edge estimation from SEM images using deep convolutional
neural networks}, author={Chaudhary, Narendra and Savari, Serap A},
booktitle={2019 30th Annual SEMI Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing
Conference (ASMC)}, pages={1--6}, year={2019}, organization={IEEE} }
@phdthesis{chinthapenta2019machine,
url={https://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/bitstream/handle/1969.1/194515/CHINTHAPENTA-FINALTHESIS-2019.pdf},
title={Machine Learning for Raga Classification in Indian Classical
Music}, author={Chinthapenta, Pranati}, year={2019} }
@article{zhou2017experimental,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1080/17452759.2017.1317214}, title={Experimental
and numerical investigation of the thermal behaviour of polylactic acid
during the fused deposition process}, author={Zhou, Xunfei and Hsieh,
Sheng-Jen and Sun, Yintong}, journal={Virtual and Physical Prototyping},
volume={12}, number={3}, pages={221--233}, year={2017},
publisher={Taylor & Francis} } @article{zhao2019antioxidants,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matt.2019.05.020}, title={Antioxidants
unlock shelf-stable Ti3C2Tx (MXene) nanosheet dispersions},
author={Zhao, Xiaofei and Vashisth, Aniruddh and Prehn, Evan and Sun,
Wanmei and Shah, Smit A and Habib, Touseef and Chen, Yexiao and Tan,
Zeyi and Lutkenhaus, Jodie L and Radovic, Miladin and others},
journal={Matter}, volume={1}, number={2}, pages={513--526}, year={2019},
publisher={Elsevier} } @article{vecellio2019role,
url={https://vivo.library.tamu.edu/vivo/display/n414502SE}, title={The
role of permafrost in Eurasian land-atmosphere interactions},
author={Vecellio, Daniel J and Nowotarski, Christopher J and Frauenfeld,
Oliver W}, journal={Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres},
volume={124}, number={22}, pages={11644--11660}, year={2019},
publisher={Wiley Online Library} } @article{lim2021radius,
doi={https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2007.06526}, title={Radius and
equation of state constraints from massive neutron stars and GW190814},
author={Lim, Yeunhwan and Bhattacharya, Anirban and Holt, Jeremy W and
Pati, Debdeep}, journal={Physical Review C}, volume={104}, number={3},
pages={L032802}, year={2021}, publisher={APS} }
@article{lim2020revisiting,
url={https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Revisiting-constraints-on-the-maximum-neutron-star-Lim-Bhattacharya/b1f6a2db22bd435f06e6f4369fc812c114f853c7},
title={Revisiting constraints on the maximum neutron star mass in light
of GW190814}, pages={1}, author={Lim, Yeunhwan and Bhattacharya, Anirban
and Holt, J and Pati, Debdeep}, journal={arXiv preprint
arXiv:2007.06526}, year={2020} } @article{qi2018two,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5038037}, title={Two-dimensional
multiferroic semiconductors with coexisting ferroelectricity and
ferromagnetism}, author={Qi, Jingshan and Wang, Hua and Chen, Xiaofang
and Qian, Xiaofeng}, journal={Applied Physics Letters}, volume={113},
number={4}, pages={043102}, year={2018}, publisher={AIP Publishing LLC}
} @article{galvez2020solid, doi={https://doi.org/10.1039/C9RA10984F},
title={Solid electrolyte interphase formation between the Li 0.29 La
0.57 TiO 3 solid-state electrolyte and a Li-metal anode: an ab initio
molecular dynamics study}, author={Galvez-Aranda, Diego E and Seminario,
Jorge M}, journal={RSC Advances}, volume={10}, number={15},
pages={9000--9015}, year={2020}, publisher={Royal Society of Chemistry}
} @article{burns2018towards,
doi={https://af.booksc.eu/book/72295194/3176ca}, title={Towards
understanding of lanthanide--transition metal bonding: investigations of
the first Ce--Fe bonded complex}, author={Burns, Corey P and Yang, Xin
and Sung, Siyoung and Wofford, Joshua D and Bhuvanesh, Nattamai S and
Hall, Michael B and Nippe, Michael}, journal={Chemical Communications},
volume={54}, number={77}, pages={10893--10896}, year={2018},
publisher={Royal Society of Chemistry} } @article{pan2020determinant,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL090014}, title={Determinant Role of
aerosols from industrial sources in Hurricane Harvey's catastrophe},
author={Pan, Bowen and Wang, Yuan and Logan, Timothy and Hsieh, Jen-Shan
and Jiang, Jonathan H and Li, Yixin and Zhang, Renyi},
journal={Geophysical Research Letters}, volume={47}, number={23},
pages={e2020GL090014}, year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@inproceedings{nath2020deep,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/WSC48552.2020.9383890}, title={Deep
generative adversarial network to enhance image quality for fast object
detection in construction sites}, author={Nath, Nipun and Behzadan, Amir
H}, booktitle={2020 Winter Simulation Conference (WSC)},
pages={2447--2459}, year={2020}, organization={IEEE} }
@article{tasdighi2016automated,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/TPWRD.2016.2524654}, title={Automated
review of distance relay settings adequacy after the network topology
changes}, author={Tasdighi, M and Kezunovic, M}, journal={IEEE
Transactions on Power Delivery}, volume={31}, number={4},
pages={1873--1881}, year={2016}, publisher={IEEE} }
@article{mojdeh2020tamu,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2020.1735694}, title={TAMU-POST:
An analysis tool for vehicle impact on in-line pile group},
author={Mojdeh, Asadollahi Pajouh and Jean-Louis, Briaud},
journal={Cogent Engineering}, volume={7}, number={1}, pages={1735694},
year={2020}, publisher={Taylor & Francis} }
@article{ha2020feasibility,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1016/j.promfg.2020.05.060}, title={A feasibility
study of continuous grain refinement of sheet metal}, author={Ha,
Taekwang and Murudkar, Rahul and Hartwig, KT and Welo, Torgeir and
Ringen, Geir and Wang, Jyhwen}, journal={Procedia Manufacturing},
volume={48}, pages={379--387}, year={2020}, publisher={Elsevier} }
@inproceedings{kou2018analysis, doi={https://doi.org/10.2118/189856-MS},
title={Analysis and Modeling of Proppant Transport in Inclined Hydraulic
Fractures}, pages={1-18}, author={Kou, R and Moridis, GJ and Blasingame,
TA}, booktitle={SPE Hydraulic Fracturing Technology Conference and
Exhibition}, year={2018}, organization={OnePetro} }
@article{zachary2019homogenization,
url={https://repository.lib.ncsu.edu/bitstream/handle/1840.20/37575/SMiRT_25_Paper_Torrence_Final.pdf},
title={Homogenization Of Concrete Microstructures In Nuclear Power
Plants}, author={Zachary, Grasley and Christa, Christa E Torrence and
Aishwarya, Baranikumar and Edward, Garboczi}, pages={1-8}, year={2019},
publisher={IASMiRT} } @article{vashisth2020reaxff,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.9b02524}, title={ReaxFF simulations
of laser-induced graphene (LIG) formation for multifunctional polymer
nanocomposites}, author={Vashisth, Aniruddh and Kowalik, Ma{\l}gorzata
and Gerringer, Joseph C and Ashraf, Chowdhury and Van Duin, Adri CT and
Green, Micah J}, journal={ACS Applied Nano Materials}, volume={3},
number={2}, pages={1881--1890}, year={2020}, publisher={ACS
Publications} } @article{charoy20192d,
url={https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1361-6595/ab46c5},
title={2D axial-azimuthal particle-in-cell benchmark for low-temperature
partially magnetized plasmas}, author={Charoy, Thomas and Boeuf,
Jean-Pierre and Bourdon, Anne and Carlsson, Johan A and Chabert, Pascal
and Cuenot, B and Eremin, Denis and Garrigues, Laurent and Hara, Kentaro
and Kaganovich, Igor D and others}, journal={Plasma Sources Science and
Technology}, volume={28}, number={10}, pages={105010}, year={2019},
publisher={IOP Publishing} } @article{wititsuwannakul2020computational,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.organomet.0c00072},
title={Computational investigations of enantioselection in
carbon--carbon bond forming reactions of ruthenium
guanidinobenzimidazole second coordination sphere hydrogen bond donor
catalysts}, author={Wititsuwannakul, Taveechai and Mukherjee, Tathagata
and Hall, Michael B and Gladysz, John A}, journal={Organometallics},
volume={39}, number={8}, pages={1149--1162}, year={2020}, publisher={ACS
Publications} } @article{cui2017structures,
doi={https://dx.doi.org/10.1073%2Fpnas.1707102114}, title={Structures of
Qβ virions, virus-like particles, and the Qβ--MurA complex reveal
internal coat proteins and the mechanism of host lysis}, author={Cui,
Zhicheng and Gorzelnik, Karl V and Chang, Jeng-Yih and Langlais, Carrie
and Jakana, Joanita and Young, Ry and Zhang, Junjie},
journal={Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, volume={114},
number={44}, pages={11697--11702}, year={2017}, publisher={National Acad
Sciences} } @article{galvez2018simulations,
url={https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1149/2.0991803jes},
title={Simulations of a LiF solid electrolyte interphase cracking on
silicon anodes using molecular dynamics}, author={Galvez-Aranda, Diego E
and Seminario, Jorge M}, journal={Journal of The Electrochemical
Society}, volume={165}, number={3}, pages={A717}, year={2018},
publisher={IOP Publishing} } @article{cao2020energy,
url={https://arxiv.org/ct?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1002%2Fprot.25888&v=7edd6f37},
title={Energy-based graph convolutional networks for scoring protein
docking models}, author={Cao, Yue and Shen, Yang}, journal={Proteins:
Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics}, volume={88}, number={8},
pages={1091--1099}, year={2020}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@article{zhao2020ph, doi={https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.202000845},
title={pH, nanosheet concentration, and antioxidant affect the oxidation
of Ti3C2Tx and Ti2CTx MXene dispersions}, author={Zhao, Xiaofei and
Vashisth, Aniruddh and Blivin, Jackson W and Tan, Zeyi and Holta, Dustin
E and Kotasthane, Vrushali and Shah, Smit A and Habib, Touseef and Liu,
Shuhao and Lutkenhaus, Jodie L and others}, journal={Advanced Materials
Interfaces}, volume={7}, number={20}, pages={2000845}, year={2020},
publisher={Wiley Online Library} } @article{yu2019wave,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1080/17445302.2018.1505699}, title={Wave
resistance determination by pressure integration and wave cut analysis
using non-linear rankine panel method}, author={Yu, Min and Falzarano,
Jeffrey}, journal={Ships and Offshore Structures}, volume={14},
number={5}, pages={469--477}, year={2019}, publisher={Taylor &
Francis} } @article{galvez2017molecular,
url={https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00894-017-3283-2},
title={Molecular dynamics simulations of the first charge of a
Li-ion—Si-anode nanobattery}, author={Galvez-Aranda, Diego E and Ponce,
Victor and Seminario, Jorge M}, journal={Journal of molecular modeling},
volume={23}, number={4}, pages={120}, year={2017}, publisher={Springer}
} @article{you2020cross, url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2012.00651},
title={Cross-modality protein embedding for compound-protein affinity
and contact prediction}, pages={1--9}, author={You, Yuning and Shen,
Yang}, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.00651}, year={2020} }
@inproceedings{gardner2019nonlinear,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1109/IEMDC.2019.8785356}, title={Nonlinear
analysis of magnetic gear dynamics using superposition and conservation
of energy}, author={Gardner, Matthew C and Toliyat, Hamid A},
booktitle={2019 IEEE International Electric Machines & Drives
Conference (IEMDC)}, pages={210--217}, year={2019}, organization={IEEE}
} @inproceedings{holt2019dense, url={https://arxiv.org/abs/1904.11449},
title={Dense matter equation of state and neutron star properties from
nuclear theory and experiment}, author={Holt, Jeremy W and Lim,
Yeunhwan}, booktitle={AIP Conference Proceedings}, volume={2127},
number={1}, pages={020019}, year={2019}, organization={AIP Publishing
LLC} } @article{chang2020hierarchical,
url={https://rnajournal.cshlp.org/content/early/2020/08/21/rna.071100.119},
title={Hierarchical natural move Monte Carlo refines flexible RNA
structures into cryo-EM densities}, author={Chang, Jeng-Yih and Cui,
Zhicheng and Yang, Kailu and Huang, Jianhua and Minary, Peter and Zhang,
Junjie}, journal={RNA}, volume={26}, number={12}, pages={1755--1766},
year={2020}, publisher={Cold Spring Harbor Lab} } @article{ni2018local,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2018.06.011}, title={Local and global
response data from post-fire earthquake simulations of RC structural
walls}, author={Ni, Shuna and Birely, Anna C}, journal={Data in brief},
volume={19}, pages={1650--1657}, year={2018}, publisher={Elsevier} }
@article{kathuria2019nonstationary,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1029/2018WR023505}, title={A nonstationary
geostatistical framework for soil moisture prediction in the presence of
surface heterogeneity}, author={Kathuria, Dhruva and Mohanty, Binayak P
and Katzfuss, Matthias}, journal={Water Resources Research},
volume={55}, number={1}, pages={729--753}, year={2019}, publisher={Wiley
Online Library} } @article{wu2019gas,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1016/j.triboint.2018.10.046}, title={Gas
labyrinth seals: On the effect of clearance and operating conditions on
wall friction factors--A CFD investigation}, author={Wu, Tingcheng and
San Andrés, Luis}, journal={Tribology International}, volume={131},
pages={363--376}, year={2019}, publisher={Elsevier} }
@article{tang2017biomimetics,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b10425}, title={Biomimetics of
[NiFe]-hydrogenase: nickel-or iron-centered proton reduction
catalysis?}, author={Tang, Hao and Hall, Michael B}, journal={Journal of
the American Chemical Society}, volume={139}, number={49},
pages={18065--18070}, year={2017}, publisher={ACS Publications} }
@inproceedings{backes2019impact,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1145/3357526.3357547}, title={The impact of
cache inclusion policies on cache management techniques},
author={Backes, Luna and Jimenez, Daniel A}, booktitle={Proceedings of
the International Symposium on Memory Systems}, pages={428--438},
year={2019} } @inproceedings{pi2020deep,
url={https://itc.scix.net/paper/w78-2020-paper-001}, title={Deep neural
networks for drone view localization and mapping in GPS-denied
environments}, author={Pi, Yalong and Nath, Nipun D and Behzadan, Amir
H}, booktitle={37th CIB W78 Information Technology for Construction
Conference (CIB W78), Sao Paulo, Brazil}, pages={1--16}, year={2020} }
@article{doney2016design,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.6b02366}, title={Design of
organocatalysts for asymmetric propargylations through computational
screening}, author={Doney, Analise C and Rooks, Benjamin J and Lu,
Tongxiang and Wheeler, Steven E}, journal={ACS Catalysis}, volume={6},
number={11}, pages={7948--7955}, year={2016}, publisher={ACS
Publications} } @phdthesis{carrion2021modern,
url={https://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/handle/1969.1/194371}, title={On
Modern Offloading Parallelization Methods: A Critical Analysis of
OpenMP}, author={Carrion, Scott Carlos}, year={2021} }
@techreport{maupin2020us,
url={https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/AD1096602}, title={US Army
Combat Capabilities Development Command Army Research Laboratory South
Research Summaries: Open Campus Collaborations (2019-2020 Update)},
author={Maupin, Heidi}, year={2020}, institution={US Army Combat
Capabilities Development Command Army Research Laboratory~…} }
@article{tazraei2019scale,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevFluids.4.104607},
title={Scale-resolving simulations of turbulence: Equilibrium boundary
layer analysis leading to near-wall closure modeling}, author={Tazraei,
Pedram and Girimaji, Sharath S}, journal={Physical Review Fluids},
volume={4}, number={10}, pages={104607}, year={2019}, publisher={APS} }
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doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4048458}, title={A Computational Model
for the Analysis of the Static Forced Performance of Self-Equalizing
Tilting Pad Thrust Bearings}, author={Koosha, Rasool and San Andrés,
Luis}, journal={Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power},
volume={142}, number={10}, pages={101013}, year={2020},
publisher={American Society of Mechanical Engineers} }
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doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/GT2017-65174}, title={Transonic Fan
Performance Evaluated With Different Solution Limiters},
author={Carpenter, Forrest L and Cizmas, Paul GA}, booktitle={Turbo
Expo: Power for Land, Sea, and Air}, volume={50794},
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Mechanical Engineers} } @article{liu2021enhancing,
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Hydrogen Evolution Activity of Monolayer Molybdenum Disulfide via a
Molecular Proton Mediator}, author={Liu, Xiangye and Li, Baichang and
Soto, Fernando A and Li, Xufan and Unocic, Raymond R and Balbuena, Perla
B and Harutyunyan, Avetik R and Hone, James and Esposito, Daniel V},
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year={2021}, publisher={Cambridge University Press} }
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drilling operations}, author={Khaled, Mohamed Shafik and Khan, Muhammad
Saad and Ferroudji, Hicham and Barooah, Abinash and Rahman, Mohammad
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Zhang, Baiyu and Parija, Abhishek and Brown, Timothy D and Alivio,
Theodore EG and Clarke, Heidi and De Jesus, Luis R and Zuin, Lucia and
others}, journal={Journal of the American Chemical Society},
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simulation of pebble bed flows: database development and investigation
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Fluids Engineering}, volume={139}, number={5}, year={2017},
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} @article{lee2020development,
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Manitoba concrete bridge rail during truck platoon impacts and
associated occupant risks}, author={Sharma, Roshan and Silvestri
Dobrovolny, Chiara and Hurlebaus, Stefan and Kiani, Maysam},
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year={2020}, publisher={Taylor & Francis} }
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of a porous elastic body with a hole}, author={Murru, Pavitra and
Rajagopal, KR}, journal={ZAMM-Journal of Applied Mathematics and
Mechanics/Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Mathematik und Mechanik},
pages={e202100103}, year={2021}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
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url={https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/AD1131862}, title={US Army
Combat Capabilities Development Command Army Research Laboratory South
Research Summaries: Collaborations (2020-2021 Update)}, author={Maupin,
Heidi}, year={2021}, institution={DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory} }
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Pistikopoulos, Ioannis PE and Onel, Melis and Pistikopoulos, Efstratios
N}, journal={Journal of Global Optimization}, volume={78}, number={1},
pages={1--36}, year={2020}, publisher={Springer} }
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title={High-energy ion generation due to the plasma wave driven by
current-carrying instabilities}, author={Hara, Kentaro}, booktitle={AIAA
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title={AARON: an automated reaction optimizer for new catalysts},
author={Guan, Yanfei and Ingman, Victoria M and Rooks, Benjamin J and
Wheeler, Steven E}, journal={Journal of chemical theory and
computation}, volume={14}, number={10}, pages={5249--5261}, year={2018},
publisher={ACS Publications} } @article{hollenbach2019bayesian,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2018.15}, title={Bayesian versus
maximum likelihood estimation of treatment effects in bivariate probit
instrumental variable models}, author={Hollenbach, Florian M and
Montgomery, Jacob M and Crespo-Tenorio, Adriana}, journal={Political
Science Research and Methods}, volume={7}, number={3}, pages={651--659},
year={2019}, publisher={Cambridge University Press} }
@article{pandey2021genetic,
url={https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-87284-x}, title={Genetic
diversity and population structure of advanced clones selected over
forty years by a potato breeding program in the USA}, author={Pandey,
Jeewan and Scheuring, Douglas C and Koym, Jeffrey W and Coombs, Joseph
and Novy, Richard G and Thompson, Asunta L and Holm, David G and
Douches, David S and Miller, J Creighton and Vales, M Isabel},
journal={Scientific reports}, volume={11}, number={1}, pages={1--18},
year={2021}, publisher={Nature Publishing Group} }
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url={https://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/handle/1969.1/173760},
title={NUMERICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF HYDRODYNAMICS OF MULTIPLE
DROPLET STREAM IMPINGEMENT FOR ATOMIZATION}, pages={1-192},
author={Muthusamy, Jayaveera Pandian and Zhang, Taolue and Alvarado,
Jorge L}, booktitle={ASTFE Digital Library}, year={2019},
organization={Begel House Inc.} } @article{brazzolotto2018tuning,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.8b02830}, title={Tuning reactivity
of bioinspired [NiFe]-hydrogenase models by ligand design and modeling
the CO inhibition process}, author={Brazzolotto, Deborah and Wang,
Lianke and Tang, Hao and Gennari, Marcello and Queyriaux, Nicolas and
Philouze, Christian and Demeshko, Serhiy and Meyer, Franc and Orio,
Maylis and Artero, Vincent and others}, journal={ACS Catalysis},
volume={8}, number={11}, pages={10658--10667}, year={2018},
publisher={ACS Publications} } @article{karimi2019deepaffinity,
url={https://arxiv.org/ct?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdx.doi.org%2F10.1093%2Fbioinformatics%2Fbtz111&v=e3d4316d},
title={DeepAffinity: interpretable deep learning of compound--protein
affinity through unified recurrent and convolutional neural networks},
author={Karimi, Mostafa and Wu, Di and Wang, Zhangyang and Shen, Yang},
journal={Bioinformatics}, volume={35}, number={18}, pages={3329--3338},
year={2019}, publisher={Oxford University Press} }
@article{mohan2018virtual,
doi={https://dx.doi.org/10.1021%2Facsomega.8b00606}, title={Virtual
screening of chemical compounds for discovery of complement C3 ligands},
author={Mohan, Rohith R and Wilson, Mark and Gorham Jr, Ronald D and
Harrison, Reed ES and Morikis, Vasilios A and Kieslich, Chris A and Orr,
Asuka A and Coley, Alexis V and Tamamis, Phanourios and Morikis,
Dimitrios}, journal={ACS omega}, volume={3}, number={6},
pages={6427--6438}, year={2018}, publisher={ACS Publications} }
@article{choi2020study, doi={https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.0c02958},
title={Study of Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from Chlorine
Radical-Initiated Oxidation of Volatile Organic Compounds in a Polluted
Atmosphere Using a 3D Chemical Transport Model}, author={Choi, Min Su
and Qiu, Xionghui and Zhang, Jie and Wang, Shuxiao and Li, Xinghua and
Sun, Yele and Chen, Jianmin and Ying, Qi}, journal={Environmental
science & technology}, volume={54}, number={21},
pages={13409--13418}, year={2020}, publisher={ACS Publications} }
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url={https://oaktrust.library.tamu.edu/handle/1969.1/157785}, title={QR
Decomposition Framework for Efficient Implementation of Linear Support
Vector Machines Using Dual Ascent}, author={Sakuru, Venkata Naga Sai
Prithvi}, year={2016} } @inproceedings{ghoreyshi2017numerical,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/GT2017-65029}, title={Numerical simulation
of the multistage ultra-high efficiency gas turbine engine, UHEGT},
author={Ghoreyshi, Seyed M and Schobeiri, Meinhard T}, booktitle={Turbo
Expo: Power for Land, Sea, and Air}, volume={50831},
pages={V003T06A034}, year={2017}, organization={American Society of
Mechanical Engineers} } @article{yang2021leakage,
doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4048459}, title={On the Leakage and
Dynamic Force Coefficients of a Novel Stepped Shaft Pocket Damper Seal:
Experimental and Numerical Verification}, author={Yang, Jing and San
Andrés, Luis and Lu, Xueliang}, journal={Journal of Engineering for Gas
Turbines and Power}, volume={143}, number={3}, pages={031002},
year={2021}, publisher={American Society of Mechanical Engineers} }
@article{koosha2019effect, doi={https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4045278},
title={Effect of pad and liner material properties on the static load
performance of a tilting pad thrust bearing}, author={Koosha, Rasool and
San Andrés, Luis}, journal={Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and
Power}, volume={141}, number={12}, pages={121007}, year={2019},
publisher={American Society of Mechanical Engineers} }
@inproceedings{johnson2021analysis,
url={https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=9595788},
title={Analysis and Benchmarking of Radial Flux Cycloidal Magnetic Gears
with Reduced Permanent Magnet Piece Count Using Consequent Poles},
author={Johnson, Matthew and Hasanpour, Shima and Gardner, Matthew C and
Toliyat, Hamid A}, booktitle={2021 IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and
Exposition (ECCE)}, pages={4334--4341}, year={2021}, organization={IEEE}
} @article{borazjani2021sharp, doi={https://doi.org/10.2514/1.J059626},
title={Sharp-Interface Immersed-Boundary Method for Compressible Flows
with Shock--Particle Interaction}, author={Borazjani, Iman},
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year={2021}, publisher={American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics} } @article{chen2014openfoam,
url={https://www.ams.org/notices/201404/rnoti-p354.pdf}, title={OpenFOAM
for computational fluid dynamics}, author={Chen, Goong and Xiong,
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of reporting bias in event-based violence data with respect to cell
phone coverage}, author={Hollenbach, Florian M and Pierskalla, Jan H},
journal={Research & Politics}, volume={4}, number={3},
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UK: London, England} } @article{selis2019dendrite,
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Li-metal anodes: an atomistic molecular dynamics study}, author={Selis,
Luis A and Seminario, Jorge M}, journal={RSC advances}, volume={9},
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title={Reactive ligand influence on initiation in phenylene
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and McNeil, Anne J}, journal={Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer
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surface albedo computational scheme: Structure and Performance},
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{10.1038/s41598-021-98124-3}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98124-3}, year = {2021}, month =
sep, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, volume =
{11}, number = {1}, author = {Renesh Bedre and Carlos Avila and Kranthi
Mandadi}, title = {HTSQualC is a flexible and one-step quality control
software for high-throughput sequencing data analysis}, journal =
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doi={https://doi.org/10.1039/C7RA12690E}, title={Dendrite formation in
silicon anodes of lithium-ion batteries}, author={Selis, Luis A and
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pages={5255--5267}, year={2018}, publisher={Royal Society of Chemistry}
} @article{harding2020importance,
doi={https://doi.org/10.26434/chemrxiv.9936473.v1}, title={Importance of
model size in quantum mechanical studies of DNA intercalation},
author={Harding, Drew P and Kingsley, Laura J and Spraggon, Glen and
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title={Rainbow Scars: From Area to Volume Law}, author={Langlett,
Christopher M and Yang, Zhi-Cheng and Wildeboer, Julia and Gorshkov,
Alexey V and Iadecola, Thomas and Xu, Shenglong}, pages={1--12},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.03416}, year={2021} }
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doi={https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0361198119845898}, title={Development of
a new manual for assessing safety hardware TL-3 low-profile portable
concrete barrier for high-speed applications}, author={Silvestri
Dobrovolny, Chiara and Shi, Shengyi and Kovar, James and Bligh, Roger P
and Hurlebaus, Stefan}, journal={Transportation research record},
volume={2673}, number={7}, pages={630--640}, year={2019},
publisher={SAGE Publications Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA} }
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doi={https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-8003-2019}, title={Interaction
between succinic acid and sulfuric acid--base clusters}, author={Lin,
Yun and Ji, Yuemeng and Li, Yixin and Secrest, Jeremiah and Xu, Wen and
Xu, Fei and Wang, Yuan and An, Taicheng and Zhang, Renyi},
journal={Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics}, volume={19}, number={12},
pages={8003--8019}, year={2019}, publisher={Copernicus GmbH} }
@article{wang2019numerical, doi={https://doi.org/10.1002/nag.3001},
title={Numerical study on the effect of rigid inclusions on existing
railroads}, author={Wang, Dong and S{\'a}nchez, Marcelo and Briaud,
Jean-Louis}, journal={International Journal for Numerical and Analytical
Methods in Geomechanics}, volume={43}, number={18}, pages={2772--2796},
year={2019}, publisher={Wiley Online Library} }
@article{doi:10.1021/acsanm.1c03860, author = {Kaynan, Ozge and Pérez,
Lisa M. and Asadi, Amir}, title = {Cellulose Nanocrystal-Enabled
Tailoring of the Interface in Carbon Nanotube- and Graphene
Nanoplatelet-Carbon Fiber Polymer Composites: Implications for
Structural Applications}, journal = {ACS Applied Nano Materials}, volume
= {0}, number = {0}, pages = {null}, year = {2022}, doi =
{10.1021/acsanm.1c03860}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.1c03860}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.1c03860} }
@ARTICLE{10.3389/fpls.2022.916231, AUTHOR={Lau, Jeekin and Young, Ellen
L. and Collins, Sara and Windham, Mark T. and Klein, Patricia E. and
Byrne, David H. and Riera-Lizarazu, Oscar}, TITLE={Rose Rosette Disease
Resistance Loci Detected in Two Interconnected Tetraploid Garden Rose
Populations}, JOURNAL={Frontiers in Plant Science}, PAGES = {1},
VOLUME={13}, YEAR={2022},
URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2022.916231},
DOI={10.3389/fpls.2022.916231}, ISSN={1664-462X}, ABSTRACT={Rose rosette
disease (RRD), caused by the Rose rosette emaravirus (RRV), is a major
threat to the garden rose industry in the United States. There has been
limited work on the genetics of host plant resistance to RRV. Two
interconnected tetraploid garden rose F1 biparental mapping
populations were created to develop high-quality tetraploid rose linkage
maps that allowed the discovery of RRD resistance quantitative trait
loci (QTLs) on linkage groups (LGs) 5, 6, and 7. These QTLs individually
accounted for around 18–40% of the phenotypic variance. The locus with
the greatest effect on partial resistance was found in LG 5. Most
individuals with the LG 5 QTL were in the simplex configuration;
however, two individuals were duplex (likely due to double reduction).
Identification of resistant individuals and regions of interest can help
the development of diagnostic markers for marker-assisted selection in a
breeding program.} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202202216, author = {Aramfard,
Mohammad and Kaynan, Ozge and Hosseini, Ehsan and Zakertabrizi, Mohammad
and Pérez, Lisa M. and Asadi, Amir}, title = {Aqueous Dispersion of
Carbon Nanomaterials with Cellulose Nanocrystals: An Investigation of
Molecular Interactions}, journal = {Small}, volume = {n/a}, number =
{n/a}, year = {2022}, pages = {2202216}, keywords = {aqueous dispersion,
carbon nanotubes, cellulose nanocrystals, density functional theory,
graphene nanoplatelets}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202202216},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/smll.202202216},
eprint =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/smll.202202216},
abstract = {Abstract Dispersing carbon nanomaterials in solvents is
effective in transferring their significant mechanical and functional
properties to polymers and nanocomposites. However, poor dispersion of
carbon nanomaterials impedes exploiting their full potential in
nanocomposites. Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) are promising for
dispersing and stabilizing pristine carbon nanotubes (pCNTs) and
graphene nanoplatelets (pGnP) in protic media without functionalization.
Here, the underlying mechanisms at the molecular level are investigated
between CNC and pCNT/pGnP that stabilize their dispersion in polar
solvents. Based on the spectroscopy and microscopy characterization of
CNC-pCNT/pGnP and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, an
additional intermolecular mechanism is proposed between CNC and
pCNT/pGnP that forms carbon-oxygen covalent bonds between hydroxyl end
groups of CNCs and the defected sites of pCNTs/pGnPs preventing
re-agglomeration in polar solvents. This work's findings indicate that
the CNC-assisted process enables new capabilities in harnessing
nanostructures at the molecular level and tailoring the performance of
nanocomposites at higher length scales.} }
@article {
AMicrophysicsSchemeConsistentSnowOpticalParameterizationfortheCommunityRadiativeTransferModel,
author = {Tong Ren and Ping Yang and Kevin Garrett and Yingtao Ma and
Jiachen Ding and James Coy}, title = "A Microphysics-Scheme-Consistent
Snow Optical Parameterization for the Community Radiative Transfer
Model", journal = "Monthly Weather Review", year = "2023", publisher =
"American Meteorological Society", address = "Boston MA, USA", volume =
"151", number = "2", doi = "10.1175/MWR-D-22-0145.1", pages= "383 -
402", url =
"https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/mwre/151/2/MWR-D-22-0145.1.xml"
}
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2021MS002754, author = {Ren, Tong and
Yang, Ping and Wei, Jian and Huang, Xianglei and Sang, Huiyan}, title =
{Performance of Cloud 3D Solvers in Ice Cloud Shortwave Radiation
Closure Over the Equatorial Western Pacific Ocean}, journal = {Journal
of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems}, volume = {14}, number = {2},
pages = {e2021MS002754}, keywords = {cloud 3D effect, cloud top
variability, cloud vertical extent}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2021MS002754}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2021MS002754},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2021MS002754},
note = {e2021MS002754 2021MS002754}, abstract = {Abstract For retrieving
cloud optical properties from satellite images or computing these
properties from climate model output, computationally efficient
treatments of cloud horizontal inhomogeneity include the Monte Carlo
Independent Column Approximation (McICA) and the Tripleclouds method.
Computationally efficient treatment of cloud horizontal radiation
exchanges includes the SPeedy Algorithm for Radiative TrAnsfer through
CloUd Sides (SPARTACUS). As a test to derive properties from satellite
images, we collocate Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer
(MODIS) cloud retrievals with near-nadir Cloud and the Earth's Radiant
Energy System (CERES) footprints in July 2008 over an equatorial western
Pacific Ocean region to compare the performance of the McICA,
Tripleclouds, and SPARTACUS solvers to the conventional plane-parallel
homogeneous (PPH) treatment. PPH overestimates cloud albedo, and the
three solvers effectively reduce overestimation with root mean square
error of shortwave upwelling irradiance decreasing between 15.72 and
18.53 W m−2, or about 22\%–25\%. Although cloud top variability does not
get fed into the simulations, all three solvers also reduce the effect
of cloud top variability on cloud albedo. Entrapment (energy reflected
downward from clouds) and horizontal radiation transfer have opposite
effects on the SPARTACUS cloud albedo simulation. The net effect depends
on the cloud vertical extent, the unawareness of which limits the
performance of the SPARTACUS solver.}, year = {2022} }
@article{LI2023100092, title = {Plastic collapse analysis in
multiaxially loaded defective pipe specimens at different temperatures},
journal = {Journal of Pipeline Science and Engineering}, volume = {3},
number = {1}, pages = {100092}, year = {2023}, issn = {2667-1433}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpse.2022.100092}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667143322000646},
author = {Y. Li and C. Sakonder and M. Paredes}, keywords = {Multiaxial
loads, Cracked pipes, Ductile fracture, Martensite kinetic phase
transformation}, abstract = {A comprehensive numerical investigation is
carried out using a newly developed constitutive model to describe
failure at low temperatures in multiaxially loaded cracked pipes made of
316L stainless steel. The kinetic phase transformation and the
temperature-dependent fracture criterion are implemented to accurately
capture the mechanical response at different temperature levels.
Although experimental observations of these simulations were not
available, their results were quite consistent with some already
published results obtained on similar materials and loading conditions
at room temperature. The results indicate that the existing multiaxial
plastic collapse failure criterion, including shearing, still provides a
fail-safe design margin for low temperature loading conditions,
including internal pressure. Moreover, martensite kinetic phase
transformation plays an important role, especially during straining at
low temperatures.} }
@article{RANAIEFAR2022110328, title = {A differential evaporation model
to predict chemistry change of additively manufactured metals}, journal
= {Materials & Design}, volume = {213}, pages = {110328}, year = {2022},
issn = {0264-1275}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matdes.2021.110328}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127521008832},
author = {Meelad Ranaiefar and Pejman Honarmandi and Lei Xue and Chen
Zhang and Alaa Elwany and Ibrahim Karaman and Edwin J. Schwalbach and
Raymundo Arroyave}, keywords = {Additive manufacturing, Markov chain
Monte Carlo, Differential evaporation, NiTi, Shape memory alloys,
Bayesian calibration, 4D printing}, abstract = {The desire for increased
performance and functionality has introduced additional complexities to
the design and fabrication of additively manufactured (AM) parts.
However, addressing these needs would require improved control over
local properties using in-line feedback from fast-acting low-fidelity
models during the fabrication process. In this regard, differential
evaporation is an inherent characteristic in metal AM processes,
directly influencing local chemistry, material properties,
functionality, and performance. In the present work, a differential
evaporation model (DEM) is presented for laser powder bed fusion (LPBF)
AM to predict and control the effect of evaporation on chemistry and
properties on local and part-wide scales. The DEM model is coupled with
an analytical thermal model that is calibrated against 51.2 Ni [at%]
nickel titanium shape memory alloy (NiTi SMA) single-track experiments
and a multi-layer model that accounts for the AM part’s multi-layer
design and the inherent melt pool overlap and chemistry propagation. The
combined hierarchical model, consisting of the thermal, evaporation, and
multi-layer components, is used to predict location-specific chemistry
for LBPF AM fabrication of Ni50.8Ti49.2 [at%] SMAs. Model predictions
are validated with values obtained from multi-layer experiments on a
commercial LPBF system, resulting in a root mean square error (RMSE) of
0.25 Ni [at%] for predicted Ni content. Additionally, martensitic
transformation temperature, Ms, is calculated and compared with
empirical data, resulting in an RMSE of 18.6 K. A practical account of
the cumulative and propagative thermal-induced evaporation effect on
location-specific chemistry is made through this linkage of models.
Fundamentally, this model chain has also provided a solution to the
forward modeling problem, enabling steps to be taken towards resolving
the inverse design problem of determining processing parameters based on
desired location-specific properties.} }
@article{HONARMANDI2021102300, title = {A rigorous test and improvement
of the Eagar-Tsai model for melt pool characteristics in laser powder
bed fusion additive manufacturing}, journal = {Additive Manufacturing},
volume = {47}, pages = {102300}, year = {2021}, issn = {2214-8604}, doi
= {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addma.2021.102300}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214860421004590},
author = {P. Honarmandi and R. Seede and L. Xue and D. Shoukr and P.
Morcos and B. Zhang and C. Zhang and A. Elwany and I. Karaman and R.
Arroyave}, keywords = {Additive manufacturing, Bayesian inference,
Markov Chain Monte Carlo, Uncertainty quantification, Uncertainty
propagation}, abstract = {The accurate prediction of the thermal
histories and melt pool characteristics during additive manufacturing
(AM) is necessary to understand the factors responsible for the quality
and integrity of the manufactured part. More importantly, the
determination of optimal process windows and even feed-forward and
in-line feedback control of the manufacturing process require
computationally cheap, fast-acting, quantitative models connecting
(local) processing parameters to melt and solidification conditions.
Initially developed in the context of welding, the Eagar-Tsai (E-T)
model stands out among the most widely used computationally cheap models
to predict melt pool characteristics during AM. Despite its widespread
use, its statistical validity in the context of AM has yet to be
thoroughly verified. In this work, we study the E-T model in a
systematic manner, from an uncertainty quantification/propagation
(UQ/UP) perspective. E-T model parameters are calibrated against high
quality single-track experimental data on the melt pool geometries of
several materials through Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling.
Posterior distributions of the model parameter values are then
propagated. We find that there are considerable discrepancies between
predicted and measured melt pool depths when process conditions
correspond to keyholing. We then apply a physics-based correction and
find that it is possible to achieve much better agreement with
experiments without increasing significantly the complexity of the E-T
model. Although there might be some uncertainties due to the missing
physics and assumptions in the model, the model accuracy and trend are
satisfactory for the purpose of accelerated product design under
uncertainty.} }
@inproceedings{Gaonkar2022, author={Gaonkar, Cheetan, and Campbell,
Lisa}, title={Transcriptome Analysis Reveals Potential Markers for
Species Delineation in Dinophysis}, journal={BMC Genomics}, year={2022},
month={Oct}, day={26}, pages={1}, abstract={Species within the genus
Dinophysis can produce okadiac acid, dinophysistoxins, and/or
pectenotoxins, which inhibit protein phosphatase, leading to diarrhetic
shellfish poisoning (DSP). The potential of these species to close
aquaculture harvesting when toxin concentrations exceed recommended
levels can lead to economic crises, which highlights the significance of
studying this group.}, issn={2022-10},
url={https://neiwpcc.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Chetan_Gaonkar.pdf}
}
@inproceedings{10.1145/3491418.3530772, author = {Nasari, Abhinand and
Le, Hieu and Lawrence, Richard and He, Zhenhua and Yang, Xin and Krell,
Mario and Tsyplikhin, Alex and Tatineni, Mahidhar and Cockerill, Tim and
Perez, Lisa and Chakravorty, Dhruva and Liu, Honggao}, title =
{Benchmarking the Performance of Accelerators on National
Cyberinfrastructure Resources for Artificial Intelligence / Machine
Learning Workloads}, year = {2022}, isbn = {9781450391610}, publisher =
{Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York, NY, USA},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3491418.3530772}, doi =
{10.1145/3491418.3530772}, abstract = {Upcoming regional and National
Science Foundation (NSF)-funded Cyberinfrastructure (CI) resources will
give researchers opportunities to run their artificial intelligence /
machine learning (AI/ML) workflows on accelerators. To effectively
leverage this burgeoning CI-rich landscape, researchers need extensive
benchmark data to maximize performance gains and map their workflows to
appropriate architectures. This data will further assist CI
administrators, NSF program officers, and CI allocation-reviewers make
informed determinations on CI-resource allocations. Here, we compare the
performance of two very different architectures: the commonly used
Graphical Processing Units (GPUs) and the new generation of Intelligence
Processing Units (IPUs), by running training benchmarks of common AI/ML
models. We leverage the maturity of software stacks, and the ease of
migration among these platforms to learn that performance and scaling
are similar for both architectures. Exploring training parameters, such
as batch size, however finds that owing to memory processing structures,
IPUs run efficiently with smaller batch sizes, while GPUs benefit from
large batch sizes to extract sufficient parallelism in neural network
training and inference. This comes with different advantages and
disadvantages as discussed in this paper.As such considerations of
inference latency, inherent parallelism and model accuracy will play a
role in researcher selection of these architectures. The impact of these
choices on a representative image compression model system is
discussed.}, booktitle = {Practice and Experience in Advanced Research
Computing}, articleno = {19}, numpages = {9}, keywords = {Frontera,
Graphics Processing Unit, ResNet50, LoneStar6, Convolution Neural
Network, Intelligence Processing Unit, Expanse, Optimization, ACES
(Accelerating Computing for Emerging Sciences), Classification,
PopVision}, location = {Boston, MA, USA}, series = {PEARC '22} }
@inproceedings{10.1145/3491418.3535182, author = {Pham, Duy and Hsu,
Kyle and Pennings, Marinus and Pham, Tri and Au, Phi}, title =
{Extending Functionalities on a Web-Based Portal for Research
Computing}, year = {2022}, isbn = {9781450391610}, publisher =
{Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York, NY, USA},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3491418.3535182}, doi =
{10.1145/3491418.3535182}, abstract = {This paper introduces a research
computing portal built as an extension to the OpenOnDemand (OOD)
framework. Students 100% implemented the portal at Texas A&M
University's (TAMU) High Performance Research Computing (HPRC) facility.
It offers an intuitive way for researchers to see all their research
computing information on a single web page. This information includes
billing accounts, file quotas, recently completed jobs, and currently
running jobs. A researcher will also be able to view detailed job
information, both for running and completed jobs. The dashboard also
provides a 100% visual interface for creating jobs and “offloading” user
codes to the cluster and functionality to manage accounts and request
quota increases and software installations,}, booktitle = {Practice and
Experience in Advanced Research Computing}, articleno = {37}, numpages =
{4}, keywords = {dashboard, Open OnDemand, portal, HPC, gateway},
location = {Boston, MA, USA}, series = {PEARC '22} }
@inproceedings{10.1145/3437359.3465602, author = {Lau, Michael and
Trivedi, Stuti and He, Zhenhua and Pham, Tri and Perez, Lisa and
Chakravorty, Dhruva}, title = {Research Cloud Bazaar: A Software Defined
Cloud Workflow Cost Management Tool}, year = {2021}, isbn =
{9781450382922}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1145/3437359.3465602}, doi =
{10.1145/3437359.3465602}, abstract = {Research workflows will benefit
from a hybrid computing environment that offers seamless integration
between on-campus and off-campus cloud resources. Commercial and Federal
and commercial clouds provide researchers a rich set of computing
platforms that allow opportunities to improve workflows and reduce the
time to research. The large number of cloud offerings, however, makes
cost management, and workflow transitions to appropriate platforms
challenging. Successfully mapping workflows from on-campus resources to
the cloud and leveraging the available cost structures to find
economical cost models are critical steps to enabling researcher access
to this vast resource. To address these concerns, here we introduce the
Research Computing Bazaar (RCB) software application for resource
mapping and cost estimation. RCB is a software-as-a-service platform
that is an elastic, scalable, and fault tolerant system. It is developed
using actual data from research computing workloads and can be easily
configured to be used by users or system administrators in computing
environments that use Slurm. In this pilot, we inform researchers about
opportunities offered by RCB to leverage flexible workload orchestration
in managing cloud costs on a major cloud service provider. An extension
into predictive capacities with machine learning mechanisms is being
developed.}, booktitle = {Practice and Experience in Advanced Research
Computing}, articleno = {27}, numpages = {4}, keywords =
{Classification, Cloud, Slurm, Cloud Cost Management, Workflow
Orchestration, Flask, Docker, Machine Learning, Resource Mapping,
API-led integration, Apache Superset}, location = {Boston, MA, USA},
series = {PEARC '21} } @article{jocse-10-1-7, author={Dhruva K.
Chakravorty and Marinus "Maikel" Pennings and Honggao Liu and Zengyu
"Sheldon" Wei and Dylan M. Rodriguez and Levi T. Jordan and Donald
"Rick" McMullen and Noushin Ghaffari and Shaina D. Le},
title={Effectively Extending Computational Training Using Informal Means
at Larger Institutions}, journal={The Journal of Computational Science
Education}, year=2019, month=jan, volume=10, issue=1, pages={40--47},
doi={https://doi.org/10.22369/issn.2153-4136/10/1/7} }
@article{Luo2019-rt, title={TAMU HPRC Portal: Leveraging Open OnDemand
for Research and Education}, author={Ping Luo and Donale McMullen and T.
Mark Huang and Shaowen Mao and C. Michael Dickens and Marinus Pennings
and Yang Liu}, abstract={The Texas A&M University High Performance
Research Computing (TAMU HPRC) Portal is a local installation and
adaptation of Open OnDemand (OOD) on the HPRC clusters. The Portal
provides an advanced cyberinfrastructure that enables HPRC users to
utilize the High Performance Computing (HPC) resources for their
research. It also serves as an educational platform for faculty and
staff for teaching and training.}, url={https://osf.io/2qj5m},
pages={1-4}, year=2019 }
@article{YU2023106282, title = {Artificial intelligence-based HDX
(AI-HDX) prediction reveals fundamental characteristics to protein
dynamics: Mechanisms on SARS-CoV-2 immune escape}, journal = {iScience},
volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {106282}, year = {2023}, issn =
{2589-0042}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2023.106282}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004223003590},
author = {Jiali Yu and Ugur Uzuner and Bin Long and Zachary Wang and
Joshua S. Yuan and Susie Y. Dai}, keywords = {Immunology, Virology},
abstract = {Summary Three-dimensional structure and dynamics are
essential for protein function. Advancements in hydrogen-deuterium
exchange (HDX) techniques enable probing protein dynamic information in
physiologically relevant conditions. HDX-coupled mass spectrometry
(HDX-MS) has been broadly applied in pharmaceutical industries. However,
it is challenging to obtain dynamics information at the single amino
acid resolution and time consuming to perform the experiments and
process the data. Here, we demonstrate the first deep learning model,
artificial intelligence-based HDX (AI-HDX), that predicts intrinsic
protein dynamics based on the protein sequence. It uncovers the protein
structural dynamics by combining deep learning, experimental HDX,
sequence alignment, and protein structure prediction. AI-HDX can be
broadly applied to drug discovery, protein engineering, and biomedical
studies. As a demonstration, we elucidated receptor-binding domain
structural dynamics as a potential mechanism of anti-severe acute
respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) antibody efficacy and
immune escape. AI-HDX fundamentally differs from the current AI tools
for protein analysis and may transform protein design for various
applications.} }
@Article{jof9040418, AUTHOR = {Yu, Jiali and Lai, Jingru and Neal, Brian
M. and White, Bert J. and Banik, Mark T. and Dai, Susie Y.}, TITLE =
{Genomic Diversity and Phenotypic Variation in Fungal Decomposers
Involved in Bioremediation of Persistent Organic Pollutants}, JOURNAL =
{Journal of Fungi}, VOLUME = {9}, YEAR = {2023}, NUMBER = {4},
ARTICLE-NUMBER = {418}, URL = {https://www.mdpi.com/2309-608X/9/4/418},
ISSN = {2309-608X}, ABSTRACT = {Fungi work as decomposers to break down
organic carbon, deposit recalcitrant carbon, and transform other
elements such as nitrogen. The decomposition of biomass is a key
function of wood-decaying basidiomycetes and ascomycetes, which have the
potential for the bioremediation of hazardous chemicals present in the
environment. Due to their adaptation to different environments, fungal
strains have a diverse set of phenotypic traits. This study evaluated
320 basidiomycetes isolates across 74 species for their rate and
efficiency of degrading organic dye. We found that dye-decolorization
capacity varies among and within species. Among the top rapid
dye-decolorizing fungi isolates, we further performed genome-wide gene
family analysis and investigated the genomic mechanism for their most
capable dye-degradation capacity. Class II peroxidase and DyP-type
peroxidase were enriched in the fast-decomposer genomes. Gene families
including lignin decomposition genes, reduction-oxidation genes,
hydrophobin, and secreted peptidases were expanded in the
fast-decomposer species. This work provides new insights into persistent
organic pollutant removal by fungal isolates at both phenotypic and
genotypic levels.}, DOI = {10.3390/jof9040418} }
@inproceedings{ han2023mlpinit,
doi={https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2210.00102}, title={MLPInit:
Embarrassingly Simple GNN Training Acceleration with MLP
Initialization}, author={Xiaotian Han and Tong Zhao and Yozen Liu and
Xia Hu and Neil Shah}, booktitle={The Eleventh International Conference
on Learning Representations }, year={2023},
url={https://openreview.net/forum?id=P8YIphWNEGO} }
@article{doi:10.1021/acsami.3c01307, author = {Carrola, Mia and Fallahi,
Hamed and Koerner, Hilmar and Pérez, Lisa M. and Asadi, Amir}, title =
{Fundamentals of Crystalline Evolution and Properties of Carbon
Nanotube-Reinforced Polyether Ether Ketone Nanocomposites in Fused
Filament Fabrication}, journal = {ACS Applied Materials \& Interfaces},
volume = {15}, number = {18}, pages = {22506-22523}, year = {2023}, doi
= {10.1021/acsami.3c01307}, note ={PMID: 37099604}, URL =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c01307}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.3c01307} }
@article{AYYILDIZ2023786, title = {Research on pinhole accidental gas
release in pipelines: Statistical modeling, real gas CFD simulation, and
validation}, journal = {Process Safety and Environmental Protection},
volume = {176}, pages = {786-796}, year = {2023}, issn = {0957-5820},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psep.2023.06.041}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0957582023005281},
author = {Burak Ayyildiz and M. Ziyan Sheriff and Mohammad Azizur Rahman
and Adolfo Delgado and Ibrahim Hassan and Hazem Nounou and Mohamed
Nounou}, keywords = {CFD simulation, Chronic leak detection, NG pipeline
leakage, Real gas simulation, Generalized Likelihood Ratio (GLR),
Numerical investigation}, abstract = {The successful risk mitigation of
Natural Gas (NG) leakage to reduce its environmental and economic impact
depends chiefly on timely detection leaks and predicting the amount of
gas release. In the present study, we investigated pinhole leaks and
predicted the gas release rate for various leak to pipe diameter ratios
and operating pressures ranging from 2 bar to 110 bar. We first set up a
laboratory-scale experiment. The generalized likelihood ratio (GLR) is
used as an advanced statistical hypothesis testing technique to detect
any shifts in the mean and variance of the process measurements in
real-time. These results improved the understanding of several leak
detection systems and contributed to a reduction in false alarms in
these systems. The presence of a leak was flagged almost immediately
after it occurred, indicating the speed and efficiency of statistical
techniques in detecting microleaks. The present computational fluid
dynamics (CFD) study provides details on the entire leak flow field that
are not possible to obtain with experimental methods. CFD is a critical
tool in process safety management, helping to identify, analyze, and
mitigate potential risks in natural gas pipeline. The CFD study proposes
new correlations to predict the nominal leak volume flow rate by
investigating the influence of leak size, pipe diameter, and pipe
pressure for wide ranges of pressures. The correlations were derived
from three-dimensional transient detachable eddy simulation model in a
commercial CFD code (ANSYS Fluent R3). The correlations enhance the
conventional models by incorporating the gas compressibility effect for
high-pressure conditions. The percentage of error between the results of
the CFD and delivered correlation fluctuated between 4% and − 5%,
demonstrating the high accuracy of the new correlation.} }
@ARTICLE{10.3389/fpls.2023.1209445, AUTHOR={Lau, Jeekin and Gill,
Haramrit and Taniguti, Cristiane H. and Young, Ellen L. and Klein,
Patricia E. and Byrne, David H. and Riera-Lizarazu, Oscar}, TITLE={QTL
discovery for resistance to black spot and cercospora leaf spot, and
defoliation in two interconnected F1 bi-parental tetraploid garden rose
populations}, JOURNAL={Frontiers in Plant Science}, VOLUME={14},
YEAR={2023},
URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2023.1209445},
DOI={10.3389/fpls.2023.1209445}, ISSN={1664-462X}, ABSTRACT={Garden
roses are an economically important horticultural crop worldwide, and
two major fungal pathogens, black spot (Diplocarpon rosae F.A. Wolf) and
cercospora leaf spot of rose (Rosisphaerella rosicola Pass.), affect
both the health and ornamental value of the plant. Most studies on black
spot disease resistance have focused on diploid germplasm, and little
work has been performed on cercospora leaf spot resistance. With the use
of newly developed software tools for autopolyploid genetics, two
interconnected tetraploid garden rose F1 populations
(phenotyped over the course of 3 years) were used for quantitative trait
locus (QTL) analysis of black spot and cercospora leaf spot resistance
as well as plant defoliation. QTLs for black spot resistance were mapped
to linkage groups (LGs) 1–6. QTLs for cercospora resistance and
susceptibility were found in LGs 1, 4, and 5 and for defoliation in LGs
1, 3, and 5. The major locus on LG 5 for black spot resistance coincides
with the previously discovered Rdr4 locus inherited from Rosa L.
‘Radbrite’ (Brite Eyes™), the common parent used in these mapping
populations. This work is the first report of any QTL for cercospora
resistance/susceptibility in tetraploid rose germplasm and the first
report of defoliation QTL in roses. A major QTL for cercospora
susceptibility coincides with the black spot resistance QTL on LG 5
(Rdr4). A major cercospora resistance QTL was found on LG 1. These
populations provide a genetic resource that will further the knowledge
base of rose genetics as more traits are studied. Studying more traits
from these populations will allow for the stacking of various QTLs for
desirable traits.} }
@article{LIU2023154741, title = {Effect of free surfaces on localized
plastic deformation in single-crystal nickel containing helium bubbles
and radiation-induced self-interstitial atom clusters}, journal =
{Journal of Nuclear Materials}, volume = {587}, pages = {154741}, year =
{2023}, issn = {0022-3115}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnucmat.2023.154741}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022311523005081},
author = {Tung Yan Liu and Michael J. Demkowicz}, keywords = {Molecular
dynamics, nickel, slip band, nanotwin, Helium bubble, free surface},
abstract = {This paper presents molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of
plastic deformation in single-crystal Ni models containing internal
distributions of helium (He) bubbles and self-interstitial atom (SIA)
clusters corresponding to experimental characterization of ex-service
Inconel X-750 components. We simulate single crystals with and without
free surfaces at room temperature and 588K, the latter temperature
corresponding to the Inconel X-750 service conditions. Both models are
deformed under multiple slip to a maximum deviatoric strain of ∼10 %. A
dislocation slip band forms in the model without free surfaces, but not
in the model with free surfaces. However, the latter exhibits nano-twin
nucleation from surfaces. Helium (He) bubbles that overlap with a slip
band or a nano-twinned region deform more severely than other bubbles in
the model. Nevertheless, the bubbles do not link up and do not form
configurations that resemble incipient cracks.} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JD038747, author = {Ren, Tong and
Yang, Ping and Loeb, Norman G. and Smith Jr., William L. and Minnis,
Patrick}, title = {On the Consistency of Ice Cloud Optical Models for
Spaceborne Remote Sensing Applications and Broadband Radiative Transfer
Simulations}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres},
volume = {128}, number = {20}, pages = {e2023JD038747}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JD038747}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2023JD038747},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2023JD038747},
note = {e2023JD038747 2023JD038747}, abstract = {Abstract Aqua satellite
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) 1-km observations
are collocated with Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES)
fields of view taken during July 2008 afternoon satellite passes over
the equatorial western Pacific Ocean. Radiation simulations are compared
with collocated CERES observations to better understand the sensitivity
of computed fluxes to two ice cloud broadband radiation parameterization
schemes and inferred ice cloud characteristics. In particular, the
radiation computational schemes and ice cloud property retrievals are
based on two respective ice particle models, the MODIS Collection 6
(MC6) aggregate model and a more microphysically consistent two-habit
model (THM). The simulation results show that both MC6 and THM
overestimate the shortwave (SW) and longwave (LW) cloud radiative
effects at the top of the atmosphere, as compared to the CERES
observations; the difference between the MC6 and THM-based ice cloud
retrievals is too small to compensate for the differences between the
two model-based radiation schemes. Therefore, the present finding
suggests that broadband radiative simulations are more sensitive to the
radiation parameterization scheme than to the input cloud properties
retrieved using the corresponding ice cloud particle optical property
model.}, year = {2023} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.13968, author = {Yang, Wanbao and
Kim, Da Mi and Jiang, Wen and Ai, Weiqi and Pan, Quan and Rahman,
Shahina and Cai, James J. and Brashear, Wesley A. and Sun, Yuxiang and
Guo, Shaodong}, title = {Suppression of FOXO1 attenuates inflamm-aging
and improves liver function during aging}, journal = {Aging Cell},
volume = {22}, number = {10}, pages = {e13968}, keywords = {aging,
FOXO1, inflamm-aging, inflammation, Kupffer cell, liver function,
monocyte-derived macrophage}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.13968}, url =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/acel.13968}, eprint =
{https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/acel.13968}, note =
{e13968 ACE-23-0446}, abstract = {Abstract The liver is a key metabolic
organ that maintains whole-body nutrient homeostasis. Aging-induced
liver function alterations contribute to systemic susceptibility to
aging-related diseases. However, the molecular mechanisms of liver aging
remain insufficiently understood. In this study, we performed bulk
RNA-Seq and single-cell RNA-Seq analyses to investigate the underlying
mechanisms of the aging-induced liver function changes. We found that
liver inflammation, glucose intolerance, and liver fat deposition were
aggravated in old mice. Aging significantly increased pro-inflammation
in hepatic macrophages. Furthermore, we found that Kupffer cells (KCs)
were the major driver to induce pro-inflammation in hepatic macrophages
during aging. In KCs, aging significantly increased pro-inflammatory
levels; in monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs), aging had a limited
effect on pro-inflammation but led to a functional quiescence in antigen
presentation and phagosome process. In addition, we identified an
aging-responsive KC-specific (ARKC) gene set that potentially mediates
aging-induced pro-inflammation in KCs. Interestingly, FOXO1 activity was
significantly increased in the liver of old mice. FOXO1 inhibition by
AS1842856 significantly alleviated glucose intolerance, hepatic
steatosis, and systemic inflammation in old mice. FOXO1 inhibition
significantly attenuated aging-induced pro-inflammation in KCs partially
through downregulation of ARKC genes. However, FOXO1 inhibition had a
limited effect on aging-induced functional quiescence in MDMs. These
results indicate that aging induces pro-inflammation in liver mainly
through targeting KCs and FOXO1 is a key player in aging-induced
pro-inflammation in KCs. Thus, FOXO1 could be a potential therapeutic
target for the treatment of age-associated chronic diseases.}, year =
{2023} }
@article{li2023machine, title={Machine Learning for Mechanistic Models
of Metapopulation Dynamics}, author={Jifan Li and Edward L. Ionides and
Aaron A. King and Mercedes Pascual and Ning Ning}, year={2023},
doi={https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2311.06702}, eprint={2311.06702},
archivePrefix={arXiv}, primaryClass={stat.AP} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL106076, author = {Ren, Tong and
Yang, Ping and Huang, Xianglei and Chen, Xiuhong and Shen, Zhaoyi},
title = {Enhanced Cloud Top Longwave Radiative Cooling Due To the Effect
of Horizontal Radiative Transfer in the Stratocumulus to Trade Cumulus
Transition Regime}, journal = {Geophysical Research Letters}, volume =
{50}, number = {22}, pages = {e2023GL106076}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL106076}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2023GL106076},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2023GL106076},
note = {e2023GL106076 2023GL106076}, abstract = {Abstract Recent studies
develop the SPeedy Algorithm for Radiative TrAnsfer through CloUd Sides
(SPARTACUS) to handle the influence of horizontal RT on vertical
radiative fluxes within an atmospheric column. The present study applies
SPARTACUS to large eddy simulation (LES)-generated cloud fields across
the stratocumulus to trade cumulus transition (STCT) regime with coarse
and fine vertical resolutions. The results show that, as the vertical
resolution increases, radiation simulations show increasingly stronger
cloud-top longwave (LW) radiative cooling. Consequently, the sharp
radiative heating gradient across the cloud layer in the LES-like
resolution simulations cannot be resolved with the coarse resolution
simulations. Including the horizontal RT typically enhances cloud LW
radiative cooling rate by less than 10\% for all the cloud fields but
more significantly in the cloud fields during the STCT. The enhanced
cloud LW radiative cooling also occurs in the lower cloud layer in the
decoupled cumulus cloud regime.}, year = {2023} }
@ARTICLE{10286268, author={Rajabioun, Ramin and Afshar, Mojtaba and
Mete, Mutlu and Atan, Özkan and Akin, Bilal}, journal={IEEE Journal of
Emerging and Selected Topics in Industrial Electronics},
title={Distributed Bearing Fault Classification of Induction Motors
Using 2-D Deep Learning Model}, year={2024}, volume={5}, number={1},
pages={115-125}, keywords={Feature extraction;Induction motors;Fault
diagnosis;Vibrations;DC motors;Brushless DC motors;Indexes;Deep learning
(DL);distributed bearing fault detection;distributed fault detection;2-D
convolutional neural network (CNN)}, doi={10.1109/JESTIE.2023.3323253}}
@conference{hong2024dpopt, title={DP-OPT: Make Large Language Model Your
Privacy-Preserving Prompt Engineer}, author={Junyuan Hong and Jiachen T.
Wang and Chenhui Zhang and Zhangheng Li and Bo Li and Zhangyang Wang},
year={2024}, eprint={2312.03724}, archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL} }
@article{LIU2024155030, title = {Effect of grain boundaries and rigid
inclusions on plasticity in nickel bicrystals containing helium bubbles
and radiation-induced self-interstitial atom clusters}, journal =
{Journal of Nuclear Materials}, volume = {594}, pages = {155030}, year =
{2024}, issn = {0022-3115}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnucmat.2024.155030}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022311524001338},
author = {Tung Yan Liu and Michael J. Demkowicz}, keywords = {Grain
boundary, Inclusion, Nickel, Helium bubble, Molecular dynamics,
Radiation}, abstract = {We use molecular dynamics to assess the effect
of grain boundaries and rigid intergranular inclusions on plastic
deformation in nickel (Ni) containing helium (He) bubbles and
self-interstitial atom clusters. Our simulations show that plasticity in
Ni bicrystals is relatively uniform, with no localized slip bands or
nano-twins. We attribute this behavior to grain boundaries, which block
dislocations and favor activation of new sources over persistent slip
along a single plane. While there is no initiation of intergranular
cracks, He bubbles at matrix/inclusion interfaces elongate along the
tensile axis and migrate towards regions of high tension, potentially
setting the conditions for formation of crack-like flaws via bubble
coalescence. We discuss the implications of our work for understanding
degradation of mechanical properties in Ni-base alloys in nuclear
reactors.} }
@article{SHEU2024120002, title = {Permeation of niobium through grain
boundaries in copper}, journal = {Acta Materialia}, volume = {274},
pages = {120002}, year = {2024}, issn = {1359-6454}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actamat.2024.120002}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1359645424003549},
author = {Emmeline Sheu and Tung Yan Liu and Darrick J. Williams and Jon
K. Baldwin and Michael J. Demkowicz}, keywords = {Copper,
Interdiffusion, Grain boundary, Transmission Kikuchi diffraction,
Molecular dynamics}, abstract = {Low mutual solubility is expected to
avert interdiffusion in layered composites of phase-separating metals.
However, we show that Nb diffuses through polycrystalline Cu—despite the
minimal bulk solubility of these elements—due to short circuit transport
of Nb along certain grain boundaries in Cu. Atomistic modeling
demonstrates that Nb-permeable Cu grain boundaries exhibit negative
enthalpy of mixing of Nb, resulting in an enthalpically-stabilized
solution of highly mobile Nb atoms that easily diffuse through the
boundary. By contrast, Mo, which also has minimal solubility with Cu,
has positive enthalpy of mixing at Nb-permeable Cu grain boundaries and
does not diffuse through them. Our findings suggest material selection
and grain boundary engineering as pathways for designing improved
diffusion barriers and thermally stable laminate composites.} }
@article{Galvez-Aranda_2022, doi = {10.1149/1945-7111/ac55c8}, url =
{https://dx.doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/ac55c8}, year = {2022}, month =
{mar}, publisher = {IOP Publishing}, volume = {169}, number = {3}, pages
= {030502}, author = {Diego E. Galvez-Aranda and Jorge M. Seminario},
title = {Li-Metal Anode in a Conventional Li-Ion Battery Electrolyte:
Solid Electrolyte Interphase Formation using Ab Initio Molecular
Dynamics}, journal = {Journal of The Electrochemical Society}, abstract
= {Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations were performed for Li+
conducting electrolytes based on 1M lithium hexafluorophosphate (Li+ )
in ethylene carbonate (EC)-ethylmethyl carbonate (EMC) (3:7wt) with 5
wt% vinylene carbonate (VC) in contact with Li-metal (electrode),
finding a variety of products due to dissociations of all electrolyte
components. The formed solid electrolyte interphase from electrolyte
degradation arranges in an outer layer composed of denser materials
(sitting over the anode surface) such as Li2(CH2O)2 from EC, Li2CO3,
Li2C2H2 and Li2CO2 from VC, and Li2C3H5O2 and LiCH3O from EMC
dissociations. Then follows an inner layer made of Li-binary compounds,
Li3CO, Li2O and Li3C from EC, Li2O, Li2C2 and LiH from VC, and LiF and
Li3P from dissociations. We calculated electron affinities of
electrolyte molecules during their decomposition using a polarizable
continuum model to consider solvent effects molecules degradation. has
the highest first and second electron affinities, despite explicit
Coulomb repulsion, which eventually dissociates the molecule right after
capturing an electron from the metal-anode; therefore, is also the
fastest to dissociate. EMC has the lowest first and second electron
affinities, thus it is the least prone to accept electrons and the least
likely to dissociate at the Li-metal interface.} }
@article{BORGESMARTINEZ2022120740, title = {Fullerene binding effects in
Al(III)/Zn(II) Porphyrin/Phthalocyanine photophysical properties and
charge transport}, journal = {Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and
Biomolecular Spectroscopy}, volume = {269}, pages = {120740}, year =
{2022}, issn = {1386-1425}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.saa.2021.120740}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1386142521013172},
author = {Merlys Borges-Martínez and Nicolás Montenegro-Pohlhammer and
Xiance Zhang and Diego E. Galvez-Aranda and Victor Ponce and Jorge M.
Seminario and Gloria Cárdenas-Jirón}, keywords = {Fullerene,
Phthalocyanine, Porphyrin, Charge transport, Solar cells}, abstract =
{We evaluate the fullerene C60 binding effect; through the metal (Al)
and through the ligand (Pc,TPP), on the photophysical and charge
transport properties of M−porphyrin(TPP)/phthalocyanine(Pc)
(M = Al(III), Zn(II)). We perform density functional theory (DFT) and
time-dependent DFT calculations for the macrocycle-C60 dyads, showing
that all systems studied are thermodynamically favorable. The C60
binding effect on the absorption spectrum is a red-shift of the Q and
Soret (B) bands of TPPs and Pcs. The Pc-dyads show longer λ for Q bands
(673 nm) than those with TPP (568 nm). AlTPP-C60 and ZnTPP-C60 show a
more favorable electron injection to TiO2 than the analogs Pcs, and the
regeneration of the dye is preferred in AlTPP-C60 and AlPc-C60.
Zero-bias conductance is computed (10-4–10-7 G0) for the dyads using
molecular junctions with Au(111)-based electrodes. When a bias voltage
of around 0.6 V up to 1 V is applied, an increase in current is obtained
for AlTPP-C60 (10-7 A), ZnTPP-C60 (10-7 A), and AlPc-C60 (10-8 A).
Although there is not a unique trend in the behavior of the dyads, Pcs
have better photophysical properties than TPPs and the latter are better
in the charge transport. We conclude that AlTPP(ZnTPP)-C60 dyads are an
excellent alternative for designing new materials for dye-sensitized
solar cells or optoelectronic devices.} } @article{Ye2024_1, doi =
{10.1007/s41324-023-00553-x}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1007/s41324-023-00553-x}, year = {2024}, month =
apr, publisher = {Springer Science and Business Media B.V.}, volume =
{32}, number = {2}, pages = {195-206}, author = {Ye, X., Lian, X., Xu,
H., Du, J., & Bao, S.}, title = {An integrated space–time framework for
linkage discovery of big survey data}, journal = {Spatial Information
Research} } @article{10.1093/insilicoplants/diae019, author = {DeSalvio,
Aaron J and Adak, Alper and Arik, Mustafa A and Shepard, Nicholas R and
DeSalvio, Serina M and Murray, Seth C and García-Ramos, Oriana and
Badavath, Himabindhu and Stelly, David M}, title = {Temporal image
sandwiches enable link between functional data analysis and deep
learning for single-plant cotton senescence}, journal = {in silico
Plants}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {diae019}, year = {2024},
month = {11}, abstract = {Abstract. Senescence is a highly ordered
biological process involving resource redistribution away from ageing
tissues that affects yield and quality in annuals and perennials. Images
from 14 unmanned/unoccupied/uncrewed aerial system/vehicle (UAS, UAV and
drone) flights captured the senescence window across two experiments
while functional principal component analysis effectively reduced the
dimensionality of temporal visual senescence ratings (VSRs) and two
vegetation indices: the red chromatic coordinate (RCC) index and the
transformed normalized difference green and red (TNDGR) index.
Convolutional neural networks trained on temporally concatenated, or
‘sandwiched’, UAS images of individual cotton plants (Gossypium hirsutum
L.), allowed single-plant analysis. The first functional principal
component scores (FPC1) served as the regression target across six CNN
models (M1–M6). Model performance was strongest for FPC1 scores from
VSRs (R2 = 0.857 and 0.886 for M1 and M4), strong for TNDGR (R2 = 0.743
and 0.745 for M3 and M6), and strong-to-moderate for RCC index
(R2 = 0.619 and 0.435 for M2 and M5), with deep learning attention of
each model confirmed by activation of plant pixels within saliency maps.
Single-plant UAS image analysis across time enabled translatable
implementations of high-throughput phenotyping by linking deep learning
with functional data analysis. This has applications for fundamental
plant biology, monitoring orchards or other spaced plantings, plant
breeding, and genetic research.}, issn = {2517-5025}, doi =
{10.1093/insilicoplants/diae019}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1093/insilicoplants/diae019}, eprint =
{https://academic.oup.com/insilicoplants/article-pdf/6/2/diae019/60929092/diae019.pdf},
} @article{YE2024105223, title = {Enhancing population data granularity:
A comprehensive approach using LiDAR, POI, and quadratic programming},
journal = {Cities}, volume = {152}, pages = {105223}, year = {2024},
month = jun, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, issn = {0264-2751}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2024.105223}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264275124004372},
author = {Xinyue Ye and Weishan Bai and Wenyu Wang and Xiao Huang},
keywords = {Population downscaling, LiDAR remote sensing, Microsoft
building footprint, Quadratic programming, Monte Carlo simulation}, }
@article{doi:10.1177/23998083231175681, author = {Ge Gao and Xinyue Ye
and Shoujia Li and Xiao Huang and Huan Ning and David Retchless and
Zhenlong Li}, title ={Exploring flood mitigation governance by
estimating first-floor elevation via deep learning and google street
view in coastal Texas}, journal = {Environment and Planning B: Urban
Analytics and City Science}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages =
{296-313}, year = {2024}, month = may, publisher = {Sage Publications},
doi = {10.1177/23998083231175681}, URL =
{https://doi.org/10.1177/23998083231175681}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1177/23998083231175681}, } @article{HAN2024104953,
title = {Retreat from flood zones: Simulating land use changes in
response to compound flood risk in coastal communities}, journal =
{Cities}, volume = {149}, pages = {104953}, year = {2024}, month = mar,
issn = {0264-2751}, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2024.104953}, url =
{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264275124001677},
author = {Yu Han and Xinyue Ye and Kayode Atoba and Pallab Mozumder and
Changjie Chen and Bastian {van den Bout} and Cees {van Westen}},
keywords = {Managed retreat, Land use simulation, Population growth, Sea
level rise, Gradient boost machine}, abstract = {Coastal communities are
increasingly vulnerable due to sea level rise and population growth.
Managed retreat is commonly recognized as a strategy that yields
multifaced benefits in community adaptation. However, limited studies
have explored the cumulative effects of sea level rise, population
migration, and managed retreat on the community resilience. This study
presents a parcel-level land use change model to analysis land-based
flood mitigation strategies in Galveston County, Texas. The developed
model integrates a Gradient Boosting Decision Tree with a flood risk
model and diverse datasets. Our model results reveal the spatial
patterns of urban development in Galveston under different relocation
policies and the compounding impacts of sea level rise and population
growth. Our findings illustrate that elevating the first floors of
buildings can significantly mitigate flood risks and associated
relocation costs. The private adaptation measure, together with
government-led buyout policies, could foster a shift toward more
resilient urban development and yield a more affordable relocation
strategy. Our findings emphasize the need for a multidisciplinary
approach in building resilient coastal communities, particularly in the
face of escalating climate risks in local communities.} }
@inproceedings{10.1145/3557916.3567822, author = {Du, Jiaxin and Ye,
Xinyue and Newman, Galen and Retchless, David}, title = {Network
science-based urban forecast dashboard}, year = {2022}, month = nov,
isbn = {9781450395304}, publisher = {Association for Computing
Machinery}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1145/3557916.3567822}, doi =
{10.1145/3557916.3567822}, abstract = {The urban environment is a highly
dynamic and complex system. Urban dynamics in this complex system is
largely reflected by the movement of people to and from Places of
Interest (POIs) in the urban area. To better understand and plan for the
city's various scenarios, there is a need to forecast urban dynamic
conditions in terms of the possible movements of people across POIs.
However, such predictions are not easy because an interdependent and
living system is hard to forecast. In addition, the commuting and
shopping of individuals in urban environments will show distinct
patterns at various stages of disasters as compared to normal
situations.This paper presents a network science-based urban forecast
dashboard, in order to monitor urban events and identify the
interdependencies that characterize urban dynamics. Behind the dashboard
is a deep learning model that incorporates the network dynamics between
POIs. The dashboard powers the prediction of urban dynamics from a
network science perspective. This research calls for a unified framework
to model the flow and network in the city. The dashboard visualizes how
network science and urban science can mutually benefit from each
other.}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th ACM SIGSPATIAL
International Workshop on Advances in Resilient and Intelligent Cities},
pages = {7–10}, numpages = {4}, keywords = {dashboard, events, network
science, resilience, urban forecast}, location = {Seattle, Washington},
series = {ARIC '22} } @article{doi:10.1177/23998083211064624, author =
{Yang Song and Huan Ning and Xinyue Ye and Divya Chandana and Shaohua
Wang}, title = {Analyze the usage of urban greenways through social
media images and computer vision}, journal = {Environment and Planning
B: Urban Analytics and City Science}, publisher = {Sage Publications},
volume = {49}, number = {6}, pages = {1682-1696}, year = {2022}, month =
{jan}, doi = {10.1177/23998083211064624}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1177/23998083211064624}, }
@article{Shaikh2024, author={Shaikh, Razeen and Larson, Nissa J. and
Kam, Jayden and Hanjaya-Putra, Donny and Zartman, Jeremiah and Umulis,
David M. and Li, Linlin and Reeves, Gregory T.}, title={Optimal
performance objectives in the highly conserved bone morphogenetic
protein signaling pathway}, journal={npj Systems Biology and
Applications}, year={2024}, month={Sep}, day={14},
doi={https://doi.org/10.1038/s41540-024-00430-9}, }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL110469, author = {Ren, Tong and
Yang, Ping and Huang, Xianglei and Iwabuchi, Hironobu}, title = {Light
Transfers Through a Koch Shape Cloud}, journal = {Geophysical Research
Letters}, volume = {51}, number = {17}, pages = {e2024GL110469}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL110469}, eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2024GL110469},
note = {e2024GL110469 2024GL110469}, abstract = {Abstract Modeling
radiative transfer in a 3D cloudy atmosphere is critical to climate
projections. A recently developed fast 3D radiation parameterization
scheme gains some success in quantifying horizontal radiative transfer
through cloud sides using cloud area fraction. Based on 3D Monte Carlo
simulations of radiative transfer through an idealized single-layer
cloud with Koch-shaped fractal geometry edges, here we show that
radiative energy transport through cloud sides correlates more
significantly with cloud area fraction than with cloud perimeter length.
The results exemplify the importance of accounting for the horizontal
radiative energy exchanges between cloud-free and cloudy regions with
cloud area fraction. Results from additional sensitivity simulations
show that increased cloud vertical extent often enhances cloud-side
sunlight leak more significantly than cloud-side sunlight interception.
At low sun elevations, cloud-side sunlight interception is enhanced more
than cloud-side sunlight leak does with the increase of cloud mass.},
year = {2024} } @article{42f56f853eb84e4b89cd202d26864afb, title =
"Factors influencing long-term city park visitations for mid-sized US
cities: A big data study using smartphone user mobility", keywords =
"Behavior monitoring, Health improvement, Long-term study, Mid-sized
city, Mobility, Park visitation, Public health, Smartphone data", author
= {Yang Song and Galen Newman and Xinke Huang and Xinyue Ye}, note =
"Publisher Copyright: {textcopyright} 2022 Elsevier Ltd", year = "2022",
month = may, doi = {10.1016/j.scs.2022.103815}, language = "English
(US)", volume = "80", journal = "Sustainable Cities and Society", issn =
"2210-6707", publisher = "Elsevier BV", }
@article{10.1145/3618393, author = {Paliwal, Avinash and Nguyen, Brandon
G. and Tsarov, Andrii and Kalantari, Nima Khademi}, title = {ReShader:
View-Dependent Highlights for Single Image View-Synthesis}, year =
{2023}, issue_date = {December 2023}, publisher = {Association for
Computing Machinery}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, volume = {42},
number = {6}, issn = {0730-0301}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.1145/3618393}, doi = {10.1145/3618393}, journal =
{ACM Trans. Graph.}, month = dec, articleno = {216}, numpages = {9},
keywords = {neural network, relocation, reshading, view synthesis} }
@article{MottadeCastro2024, author={Motta de Castro, Emile and Tabei,
Ali and Cline, Daren B H and Haque, Ejaz and Chambers, Lindsay B and
Song, Kenan and Perez, Lisa and Kalaitzidou, Kyriaki and Asadi, Amir},
title={New insights in understanding the fiber-matrix interface and its
reinforcement behavior using single fiber fragmentation data},
journal={Advanced Composites and Hybrid Materials}, year={2024},
doi={10.1007/s42114-024-01054-7}, }
@Article{atmos16010048, AUTHOR = {Wei, Shijin and Shores, Kyle and Xu,
Yangyang}, TITLE = {A Comparison of Machine Learning-Based Approaches in
Estimating Surface PM2.5 Concentrations Focusing on Artificial Neural
Networks and High Pollution Events}, JOURNAL = {Atmosphere}, VOLUME =
{16}, YEAR = {2025}, NUMBER = {1}, ARTICLE-NUMBER = {48}, URL =
{https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/16/1/48}, ISSN = {2073-4433}, DOI =
{10.3390/atmos16010048} }
@article{PhysRevB.111.L060407, title = {Thickness-driven transitions
between magnetic states in ferromagnetic films}, author = {Mankenberg,
J. J. and Abanov, Ar.}, journal = {Phys. Rev. B}, volume = {111}, issue
= {6}, pages = {L060407}, numpages = {6}, year = {2025}, month = {Feb},
publisher = {American Physical Society}, doi =
{10.1103/PhysRevB.111.L060407}, url =
{https://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.111.L060407} }
@article{https://doi.org/10.1029/2025GL116735, author = {Ren, Tong and
Yang, Ping and Brindley, Helen E. and L’Ecuyer, Tristan S. and Maestri,
Tiziano}, title = {Temperature-Dependent Optical Properties of Ice
Crystals in the Far-Infrared Regime}, journal = {Geophysical Research
Letters}, volume = {52}, number = {12}, pages = {e2025GL116735}, doi =
{https://doi.org/10.1029/2025GL116735}, url =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2025GL116735},
eprint =
{https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2025GL116735},
note = {e2025GL116735 2025GL116735}, year = {2025} } @article{
doi:10.1073/pnas.2420505122, author = {Jitao Chen and Shihan Li and
Shuang Zhang and Terry Isson and Tais W. Dahl and Noah J. Planavsky and
Feifei Zhang and Xiang-dong Wang and Shu-zhong Shen and Isabel P.
Montañez }, title = {Repeated occurrences of marine anoxia under high
atmospheric O2 and icehouse conditions}, journal =
{Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, volume = {122},
number = {26}, pages = {e2420505122}, year = {2025}, doi =
{10.1073/pnas.2420505122}, URL =
{https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2420505122}, eprint =
{https://www.pnas.org/doi/pdf/10.1073/pnas.2420505122}, }
@article{https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2505.06699, title={Model
Steering: Learning with a Reference Model Improves Generalization Bounds
and Scaling Laws}, author={Xiyuan Wei and Ming Lin and Fanjiang Ye and
Fengguang Song and Liangliang Cao and My T. Thai and Tianbao Yang},
year={2025}, eprint={2505.06699}, archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.LG}, url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.06699},
doi={https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2505.06699}, }
@Article{ani15101446, AUTHOR = {Oliaro, Francis J. and Ajileye,
Oluwaseun and George, Iris and Lamsal, Sal and Mosley, Ilana A. and
Ramirez, Bradly and Sanders, Tiana L. and Vanitshavit, Veerakit and Van
Bonn, William and Pinnell, Lee J.}, TITLE = {The Role of
Ammonia-Oxidizing Archaea During Cycling and Animal Introduction in a
Newly Commissioned Saltwater Aquarium}, JOURNAL = {Animals}, VOLUME =
{15}, YEAR = {2025}, NUMBER = {10}, ARTICLE-NUMBER = {1446}, URL =
{https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/15/10/1446}, PubMedID = {40427322}, ISSN
= {2076-2615}, DOI = {10.3390/ani15101446} }
@article{doi:10.1021/acs.jpca.5c03431, author = {Dockx, Luka and
Sztáray, Bálint and Dutoi, Anthony D.}, title = {Quantitative Modeling
of Excited-State Dynamics in Valence Photoionized Vinyl Fluoride},
journal = {The Journal of Physical Chemistry A}, volume = {129}, number
= {29}, pages = {6632-6637}, year = {2025}, doi =
{10.1021/acs.jpca.5c03431}, note ={PMID: 40662670}, URL =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.5c03431}, eprint =
{https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.5c03431} }
@conference{laskar_2025_16732100, author = {Laskar, Sabuj}, title =
{SuperMesh: Energy-Efficient Collective Communications for Accelerators
}, month = aug, year = 2025, publisher = {Zenodo}, doi =
{10.5281/zenodo.16732100}, url =
{https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16732100}, }
@ARTICLE{11168237, author={Wang, Lei and Lee, Chia-Hang and Merrell,
Maccoy and Chacon, Gino and Jiménez, Daniel A. and Gratz, Paul V.},
journal={IEEE Computer Architecture Letters}, title={R-Max: A Method for
Approximating the Benefit of Ideal Prefetching and Replacement Policy},
year={2025}, volume={24}, number={2}, pages={293-296},
keywords={Prefetching;Upper bound;Bandwidth;Recording;Prediction
algorithms;Training;Performance gain;Memory management;Filtering;Data
mining;Computer architecture;prefetching;cache;evaluation methodology},
doi={10.1109/LCA.2025.3611316} }
@ARTICLE{11196402, author={Kumar, Vijay and Benavides, Jaime and
Carrillo-Gallegos, Carlos and Speyer, Gil and Kioumourtzoglou,
Marianthi-Anna}, booktitle={2025 IEEE High Performance Extreme Computing
Conference (HPEC)}, title={Scalable Bayesian Nonparametric Ensemble
(BNE) for Spatio-temporal Air Pollution Predictions using
High-Performance Computing}, year={2025}, volume={}, number={},
pages={1-7}, keywords={Uncertainty;Runtime;Atmospheric modeling;High
performance computing;Computational modeling;Predictive models;Parallel
processing;Air pollution;Data models;Bayes methods;Bayesian
Nonparametric Ensemble (BNE);High-Performance Computing (HPC);Air
Pollution;Uncertainty Quantification},
doi={10.1109/HPEC67600.2025.11196402} } @Article{AhmatIbrahim2025,
author={Ahmat Ibrahim, Saleh and Meng, Shengyan and Milhans, Charles and
Barecka, Magda H. and Liu, Yilang and Li, Qiang and Yang, Jiaqi and Sha,
Yabing and Yi, Yanhui and Che, Fanglin}, title={Interpretable machine
learning-guided plasma catalysis for hydrogen production},
journal={Nature Chemical Engineering}, year={2025}, month={Nov},
day={01}, volume={2}, number={11}, pages={699-710}, abstract={Low-carbon
ammonia decomposition via nonthermal plasma is a promising method for
on-site hydrogen production, but finding optimal catalysts is
challenging. Here we use multiscale simulations to link catalytic
activity to nitrogen adsorption energy (EN) and identify the best
catalysts for conventional heating and nonthermal plasma: Ru and Co,
respectively. With an ideal EN of −0.51{\thinspace}eV for plasma
catalysis, we applied machine learning to screen 3,300+ catalysts and
designed efficient, earth-abundant alloys such as Fe3Cu, Ni3Mo, Ni7Cu
and Fe15Ni. Plasma catalytic experiments at
400{\thinspace}{\textdegree}C further validated that the above alloys
achieved higher conversions than the individual metals, and they also
have comparable performance to Co. Our techno-economic analysis
demonstrated potential economic benefits of plasma catalytic ammonia
decomposition over Ni3Mo, highlighting a H2 production cost below the
US{\$}1 per kg H2 target and a low carbon footprint of
{\textasciitilde}0.91{\thinspace}kg of CO2 per kg H2.},
issn={2948-1198}, doi={10.1038/s44286-025-00287-7},
url={https://doi.org/10.1038/s44286-025-00287-7} }
@article{doi:10.1021/acsnano.5c07146,
author = {Zakertabrizi, Mohammad and Bozorgmehrian, Farshad and Jeong, Myunghwan and Hosseini, Ehsan and Ponce, Victor and Fallahi, Hamed and Bahadorikhalili, Saeed and Nasrabadi, Hadi and Jarrahbashi, Dorrin and Castaneda, Homero and Asadi, Amir},
title = {Patterned Nanostructures on Cathodes: A Pathway to Stronger, High-Energy, High-Power Li-Ion Batteries},
journal = {ACS Nano},
volume = {19},
number = {45},
pages = {38970-38980},
year = {2025},
doi = {10.1021/acsnano.5c07146},
note ={PMID: 41183853},
URL = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5c07146},
eprint = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5c07146}
}
@article{Patel2025-yk,
title = {Tidally torn: Why the most common stars may lack large,
habitable-zone moons},
author = {Patel, Shaan D and Quarles, Billy and Weinberg, Nevin N and
Cuntz, Manfred},
journal = {Astron. J.},
publisher = {American Astronomical Society},
volume = {171},
number = {1},
pages = {11},
month = {jan},
year = {2025},
copyright = {https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/},
doi = {10.3847/1538-3881/ae1b8c},
}
@article{10.1093/mnrasl/slaf077,
author = {Patel, Shaan D and Quarles, Billy and Cuntz, Manfred and Weinberg, Nevin N},
title = {Can moons exist around the habitable-zone planet K2-18b?},
journal = {Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters},
volume = {542},
number = {1},
pages = {L144-L148},
year = {2025},
month = {07},
issn = {1745-3925},
doi = {10.1093/mnrasl/slaf077},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1093/mnrasl/slaf077},
eprint = {https://academic.oup.com/mnrasl/article-pdf/542/1/L144/63790509/slaf077.pdf},
}
@article{11222673,
author={Diaz, Neil and Gautam, Natarajan},
journal={IEEE Access},
title={Non-Periodic Traffic Allocation in Time-Aware TSN Networks},
year={2025},
volume={13},
number={},
pages={187758-187773},
keywords={Schedules;Synchronization;Quality of service;Logic gates;Resource management;Delays;Videos;Instruments;Standards;Reliability;Aperiodic;best-effort;fixed-cycle traffic light (FCTL);non-periodic;periodic;polling system;queuing;time-aware shaper (TAS);time-sensitive networking},
doi={10.1109/ACCESS.2025.3627206}
}
@article{Foley2025,
author={Foley, Nicole M. and Rasulis, Richard G. and Wani, Zoya and Mendoza Cerna, Mayra N. and Figueir{\'o}, Henrique V.and Koepfli, Klaus Peter and Raudsepp, Terje and Murphy, William J.},
title={An ancient recombination desert is a speciation supergene in placental mammals},
journal={Nature},
year={2025},
month={Nov},
day={12},
issn={1476-4687},
doi={10.1038/s41586-025-09740-2},
}
@article{bedir2025maskedsymbolmodelingdemodulation,
title={Masked Symbol Modeling for Demodulation of Oversampled Baseband Communication Signals in Impulsive Noise-Dominated Channels},
author={Oguz Bedir and Nurullah Sevim and Mostafa Ibrahim and Sabit Ekin},
year={2025},
eprint={2512.01428},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={eess.SP},
doi={https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2512.01428},
}
@article{VIGNESHWARAN2025105973,
title = {Unhomogeneous yielding of porous materials — Evolution equations},
journal = {Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids},
volume = {196},
pages = {105973},
year = {2025},
issn = {0022-5096},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2024.105973},
author = {R. Vigneshwaran and A.A. Benzerga},
keywords = {Porous material, Eigenstrain, Microstructure, Void coalescence, Void shearing},
}