39 results match your criteria: "The University of Idaho[Affiliation]"

Alcohol use among Hispanic college students along the US/Mexico border.

Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse

November 2016

c Department of Movement Sciences , The University of Idaho, Moscow , ID , USA.

Background: The trend of alcohol use among college students has been shown to vary by ethnicity and has been linked to acculturation among Hispanics. Consistent findings indicate that males consume alcohol more frequently and in greater quantities compared to females.

Objectives: This study investigated the drinking habits of Hispanic college students living in the border region of South Texas.

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Background: Partial meniscectomy does not consistently produce the desired positive outcomes intended for meniscal tears lesions; therefore, a need exists for research into alternatives for treating symptoms of meniscal tears. The purpose of this case series was to examine the effect of the Mulligan Concept (MC) "Squeeze" technique in physically active participants who presented with clinical symptoms of meniscal tears.

Description Of Cases: The MC "Squeeze" technique was applied in five cases of clinically diagnosed meniscal tears in a physically active population.

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The Science of Firescapes: Achieving Fire-Resilient Communities.

Bioscience

February 2016

Alistair M.S. Smith is an environmental biophysicist at the University of Idaho, in Moscow, and is affiliated with the College of Natural Resources and the Idaho Fire Initiative for Research and Education (IFIRE). Travis B. Paveglio is a natural resource sociologist who focuses on wildfires and is affiliated with the Department of Natural Resources and Society at the University of Idaho, in Moscow. Andrew D. Kliskey, Luigi Boschetti, Kara M. Yedinak, and Eva K. Strand are each affiliated with the College of Natural Resources at the University of Idaho, in Moscow. Crystal A Kolden is a pyrogeographer affiliated with the College of Science at the University of Idaho, Moscow. Mark A Cochrane is an ecologist affiliated with Geospatial Sciences Center of Excellence at South Dakota State University, Brookings. David M.J.S. Bowman is an environmental change biologist and pyrogeographer affiliated with the University of Tasmania, in Sandy Bay. Max A. Moritz is a cooperative extension specialist in fire ecology and management and is affiliated with the College of Natural Resources at the University of California, Berkeley. Lilian Alessa is a biologist from the University of Idaho, Moscow, and is affiliated with the Center for Resilient Communities, Alaska EPSCoR, and the International Arctic Research Center. Andrew T. Hudak is a research forester affiliated with the USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, in Moscow. Chad M. Hoffman is a forester affiliated with Colorado State University and the Western Forest Fire Research (WESTFIRE) Center, in Fort Collins. James A. Lutz is an ecologist affiliated with Utah State University, Logan, and is affiliated with the Yosemite, Utah, and Wind River Forest Dynamics Plots. Lloyd P. Queen is a remote sensing scientist affiliated with the University of Montana and the FireCenter, Missoula. Scott J. Goetz is a geographer affiliated with Woods Hole Research Center, Falmouth, and is affiliated with the Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE). Philip E. Higuera is an ecologist affiliated with the University of Montana, Missoula. Mike Flannigan is a fire researcher affiliated with the University of Alberta, Edmonton, and is affiliated with the Western Partnership for Western Fire Science. Adam C. Watts is a fire ecologist affiliated with the Desert Research Institute, Reno. Jan W. van Wagtendonk is a research forester emeritus affiliated with the National Park Service, Yosemite National Park, Yosemite Field Station. John W. Anderson is a virtual architect affiliated with Virtual Technology and Design at the University of Idaho, in Moscow. Brian J. Stocks is a forester and is affiliated with BJ Stocks Wildfire Investigations. John T. Abatzoglou is a climatologist and is affiliated with the Department of Geography at the University of Idaho.

Wildland fire management has reached a crossroads. Current perspectives are not capable of answering interdisciplinary adaptation and mitigation challenges posed by increases in wildfire risk to human populations and the need to reintegrate fire as a vital landscape process. Fire science has been, and continues to be, performed in isolated "silos," including institutions (e.

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For the first time, inter-operator dependence of MRI based computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the cervical spinal subarachnoid space (SSS) is evaluated. In vivo MRI flow measurements and anatomy MRI images were obtained at the cervico-medullary junction of a healthy subject and a Chiari I malformation patient. 3D anatomies of the SSS were reconstructed by manual segmentation by four independent operators for both cases.

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Potential crash reduction benefits of shoulder rumble strips in two-lane rural highways.

Accid Anal Prev

February 2015

The University of Idaho, Dept of Statistical Science, 875 Perimeter Dr. MS 1104, Moscow, ID 83844-1104, USA. Electronic address:

This paper reports the findings from a study aimed at examining the effectiveness of shoulder rumble strips in reducing run-off-the-road (ROR) crashes on two-lane rural highways using the empirical Bayes (EB) before-and-after analysis method. Specifically, the study analyzed the effects of traffic volume, roadway geometry and paved right shoulder width on the effectiveness of shoulder rumble strips. The results of this study demonstrate the safety benefits of shoulder rumble strips in reducing the ROR crashes on two-lane rural highways using the state of Idaho 2001-2009 crash data.

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Experiential training for enhancing intercultural sensitivity.

J Cult Divers

August 2013

School Psychology at the University of Idaho, 1000 West Hubbard Avenue, Suite 242, Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814, USA.

This project aims to enhance intercultural sensitivity using cross-cultural movies and focused group discussions with invited guests. Both treatment and control groups consisted of 9 Caucasian participants. The researcher conducted 8 group sessions with the participants of treatment group.

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Microbial Communities as Experimental Units.

Bioscience

May 2011

Mitch D. Day ( ) is a postdoctoral fellow, Daniel Beck is a doctoral student, and James A. Foster is a professor, all in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Idaho, in Moscow, Idaho. All are affiliated with the Initiative for Bioinformatics and Evolutionary Studies (IBEST), an interdisciplinary center devoted to developing a greater understanding of the patterns and processes of evolution and their relevance to biomedicine. All are also members of the National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center, BEACON, for the study of evolution in action.

Artificial ecosystem selection is an experimental technique that treats microbial communities as though they were discrete units by applying selection on community-level properties. Highly diverse microbial communities associated with humans and other organisms can have significant impacts on the health of the host. It is difficult to find correlations between microbial community composition and community-associated diseases, in part because it may be impossible to define a universal and robust species concept for microbes.

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The author discusses how researchers from various scientific disciplines view the origins of and mechanisms (evolutionary as well as physiological) underlying menopause in humans. She describes presentations from a symposium centered around interdisciplinary perspectives on female reproductive aging. Comparative zoology, primatology, and anthropology have much to contribute to our understanding of human menopause; hence the symposium contained speakers representing these subdisciplines, as well as the more typical disciplines of endocrinology and neurobiology.

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Although the monogenomic genera of the Triticeae have been analyzed in numerous biosystematic studies, the allopolyploid genera have not been as extensively studied within a phylogenetic framework. We focus on North American species of Elymus, which, under the current genomic system of classification, are almost all allotetraploid, combining the St genome of Pseudoroegneria with the H genome of Hordeum. We analyze new and previously published chloroplast DNA data from Elymus and from most of the monogenomic genera of the Triticeae in an attempt to identify the maternal genome donor of Elymus.

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Data for the analysis were the health related fitness scores, anthropometric measures, and physical activity information from the National Children and Youth Fitness Study. The subjects were 6,800 boys and 6,523 girls, ages 6 through 18. Multiple regression produced linear composites that were used as covariates to evaluate physical and environmental characteristics that relate to gender differences.

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Protein kinase activity is associated with both the extracellular and the occluded forms of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus, a baculovirus. Serine and threonine are the predominant amino acids phosphorylated by the kinase activity associated with both viral forms; no phosphotyrosine was detected. The addition of calcium, cAMP, or cGMP has no apparent effect on the amount of phosphorylation or the substrates phosphorylated.

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Calculation of CO2 gas phase diffusion in leaves and its relation to stomatal resistance.

Photosynth Res

September 1981

Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, in cooperation with the University of Idaho, College of Agriculture Research and Extension Center, 83341, Kimberly, ID, USA.

A new theory and experimental method was developed to measure the diffusion resistance to CO2 in the gas phase of mesophyll leaf tissue. Excised leaves were placed in a chamber and their net evaporation and CO2 assimilation rates measured at two different ambient pressures. These data were used to calculate CO2 gas phase diffusion resistances.

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Mutations of seven temperature-sensitive mutants of the baculovirus Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) were mapped with respect to the physical restriction map of the A. californica NPV DNA by marker rescue. DNAs from two distantly related NPVs of the multiply embedded type and two NPVs of the singly embedded type were unable to rescue two A.

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Physical Map of the DNA Genome of Autographa californica Nuclear Polyhedrosis Virus.

J Virol

March 1979

Department of Bacteriology and Biochemistry, The University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83843.

A physical map of the 88 x 10(6) dalton, circular DNA genome of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus was constructed. The complete order of BamHI and XmaI restriction enzyme sites was determined. The EcoRI and HindIII fragments were partially ordered, and their general locations, relative to the BamHI and XmaI maps, were determined.

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