Publications by authors named "D E Parks"

Occupational exposures to respirable dusts and respirable crystalline silica (RCS) is well established as a health hazard in many industries including mining, construction, and oil and gas extraction. The U.S.

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Experimental neuroscience techniques are advancing rapidly, with major recent developments in high-density electrophysiology and targeted electrical stimulation. In combination with these techniques, cortical organoids derived from pluripotent stem cells show great promise as models of brain development and function. Although sensory input is vital to neurodevelopment , few studies have explored the effect of meaningful input to neural cultures over time.

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With the use of high-density multi-electrode recording devices, electrophysiological signals resulting from action potentials of individual neurons can now be reliably detected on multiple adjacent recording electrodes. Spike sorting assigns these signals to putative neural sources. However, until now, spike sorting can only be performed after completion of the recording, preventing true real time usage of spike sorting algorithms.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Direct-on-filter analysis using a partial least squares (PLS) method has recently gained traction for its ability to quantify multiple dust species directly from filters, but it struggles with the inherent heterogeneity of dust samples.
  • * Mixture of experts (MoE) models present a more effective alternative to PLS, improving accuracy in measuring respirable dust mass across various mine types by better handling heterogeneous data and identifying outliers.
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How seizures begin at the level of microscopic neural circuits remains unknown. High-density CMOS microelectrode arrays provide a new avenue for investigating neuronal network activity, with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. We use high-density CMOS-based microelectrode arrays to probe the network activity of human hippocampal brain slices from six patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy in the presence of hyperactivity promoting media.

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