Publications by authors named "Michael Janzen"

Camera traps are becoming ubiquitous tools for ecologists. While easily deployed, they require human time to organize, review, and classify images including sequences of images of the same individual, and non-target images triggered by environmental conditions. For such cases, we developed an automated computer program, named EventFinder, to reduce operator time by pre-processing and classifying images using background subtraction techniques and color histogram comparisons.

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Remote cameras are an increasingly important tool for ecological research. While remote camera traps collect field data with minimal human attention, the images they collect require post-processing and characterization before it can be ecologically and statistically analyzed, requiring the input of substantial time and money from researchers. The need for post-processing is due, in part, to a high incidence of non-target images.

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For the treatment of patients with acute coronary syndromes in the catheterization laboratory, a high-dose bolus (HDB) regimen of tirofiban (25 µg/kg bolus, followed by an infusion of 0.15 µg/kg/min) leads to a consistent and rapid inhibition of platelet aggregation during the first hour after initiation of therapy. The objective of the present study was to use pharmacokinetic modeling to identify an appropriate dosage of tirofiban that would produce a plasma concentration-time profile in patients with severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance<30 ml/min) as similar as possible to that of the HDB regimen in patients with normal renal function.

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The development of a low-cost, sensitive colorimetric sensor array for the detection and identification of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is reported. Using an array composed of chemoresponsive dyes, enormous discriminatory power is possible in a simple device that can be imaged easily with an ordinary flatbed scanner. Excellent differentiation of closely related organic compounds can be achieved, and a library of 100 VOCs is presented.

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In the first example of oxidative addition of tellurium-halide bonds to a transition-metal complex, Ph(2)TeCl(2) reacts with [PtMe(2)(bu(2)bpy)], 1, bu(2)bpy = 4,4'-di-tert-butyl-2,2'-bipyridine, to give an organoplatinum(IV) complex that can be formulated as an ionic diphenyl telluride complex [PtClMe(2)(TePh(2))(bu(2)bpy)]Cl or as a neutral chlorodiphenyltelluryl complex [PtClMe(2)(TePh(2)Cl)(bu(2)bpy)]; the complex contains an unusually long Te...

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The first metallacycles formed by oxidative addition of tin-sulfur, tin-selenium, tin-tellurium, and germanium-tellurium bonds to platinum(II) are reported. In particular, the ring compounds [(R(2)SnE)(3)], where R = Me, Ph and E = Se, Te, and the new compound [(Me(2)GeTe)(3)], react with [PtMe(2)(bu(2)bpy)] (bu(2)bpy = 4,4'-di-tert-butyl-2,2'-bipyridine) to give the new organoplatinum(IV) metallacycles [PtMe(2)(R(2)SnE)(2)(bu(2)bpy)] and [PtMe(2)(Me(2)GeTe)(2)(bu(2)bpy)], respectively. The tin-containing metallacycles complexes can undergo exchange of either the R(2)Sn or the E groups by reaction with [(R'(2)SnE)(3)] or [(R(2)SnE')(3)], respectively, to give the corresponding new metallacycles of general formula [PtMe(2)(R(2)SnE-R'(2)SnE)(bu(2)bpy)] or [PtMe(2)(R(2)SnE-R(2)SnE')(bu(2)bpy)].

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