Publications by authors named "C Massey"

Various animal models have been established to gain a better understanding of the pathogenesis of Marburg virus (MARV) and Ravn virus (RAVV), and to develop medical countermeasures (MCMs) against them. Of these models, which range from rodents to nonhuman primates (NHPs), the macaque model most closely mimics the severe disease displayed in humans. Nevertheless, rodent models mirror many key aspects of human infection and are frequently used for the initial assessment of experimental vaccines and treatments.

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Catastrophic sediment overloading of mountain streams in response to coseismic landsliding causes river systems to fundamentally reorganize their morphology and sediment transporting characteristics, influencing sediment yields, bedrock incision, and the coupling between erosion and tectonics. A sequence of 13 airborne LiDAR surveys of an alpine tributary of the Hāpuku River, New Zealand, reveals patterns of sediment mass balance change over 5 years following delivery of 6.6 million cubic meters of landslide debris during the 2016 magnitude 7.

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Categorical learning is important and often challenging in both specialized domains, such as medical image interpretation, and commonplace ones, such as face recognition. Research has shown that comparing items from different categories can enhance the learning of perceptual classifications, particularly when those categories appear highly similar. Here, we developed and tested novel adaptively triggered comparisons (ATCs), in which errors produced during interactive learning dynamically prompted the presentation of active comparison trials.

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  • Radiopharmaceutical therapies (RPT) trigger a type I interferon (IFN1) response in tumor cells, with the response varying based on the type of isotope used.
  • In experiments with murine tumor models, the timing and intensity of the IFN1 response were linked to the isotope's half-life and energy transfer properties.
  • Combining Ac-NM600 with immune checkpoint inhibitors enhanced survival in wild-type tumors, suggesting that the effectiveness of RPT is influenced by the radioisotope and relies on STING pathways for immune response enhancement.
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  • HIV and malaria often occur together in the same regions, leading to co-infection that worsens the symptoms of both diseases, but the mechanisms behind this increase in severity are not well understood.
  • A pilot study in rhesus macaques treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) aimed to explore the effects of co-infection, revealing persistent viral loads and decreased CD4+ T-cells despite treatment, along with signs of anemia and parasitemia.
  • The study also found that co-infection increased inflammatory markers and altered neutrophil behavior, suggesting that inflammation and gastrointestinal dysfunction could play key roles in the aggravated disease pathology seen in HIV and malaria co-infection.
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