153 results match your criteria: "University of Delaware College of Arts & Sciences[Affiliation]"

Prevalence of Internet Gaming Disorder, Depression, and Anxiety Symptoms Before and After the Pandemic.

Healthcare (Basel)

December 2024

David O. Robbins Neuroscience Program, Psychology Department, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, OH 43015, USA.

"Internet gaming disorder" (IGD) is a condition for further study in the DSM-5, with its prevalence estimated to be anywhere from 0.7% to 27.5% depending on the methodology used to measure it.

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Objective: To evaluate the associations between psychological factors (pain self-efficacy, kinesiophobia, and pain catastrophizing), physical activity, and patient-reported hip function in patients presenting to physical therapy with chronic (>3 months) hip pain.

Design: Observational, cross-sectional.

Methods: Participants completed a survey including age, sex, height/weight, symptom duration, 11-item Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK-11), Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (PSEQ), and 12-item International Hip Outcome Tool (iHOT-12).

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Deaf-led alarm design: technology and disability in home, work and parenthood.

Med Humanit

December 2024

History of Capitalism, Technology and Culture, University of Delaware College of Arts & Sciences, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA

Domestic alarms are highly personal technological appendages that help us achieve an individual sense of safety and familial well-being-like baby monitors that help us care for children and alarm clocks that ensure a daily routine and help us get to work on time. Alarms can be understood as technologies that extend our eyes, ears, and memory to monitor our homes and ourselves in various ways beyond typical human capacity. The designs of domestic alarms tend to favour audible forms of alerting, and disabled users and inventors have hacked and redesigned alarms to fit their own families' needs.

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Wetland classification based on depth-adaptive convolutional neural networks using leaf-off SAR imagery.

Sci Total Environ

December 2024

Department of Geographical Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA. Electronic address:

The recent development of deep learning (DL) techniques has created opportunities for classifying wetlands from remote sensing data (mainly optical data). However, the methods for accurately and efficiently classifying large-scale wetlands using DL and radar data that can be more effective than optical data still needs evaluation. In this study, we developed an end-to-end depth-adaptive convolutional neural network (CNN) for mapping wetlands using leaf-off time-series Sentinel-1 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery along with ancillary data.

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GENCODE 2025: reference gene annotation for human and mouse.

Nucleic Acids Res

November 2024

European Molecular Biology Laboratory, European Bioinformatics Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK.

GENCODE produces comprehensive reference gene annotation for human and mouse. Entering its twentieth year, the project remains highly active as new technologies and methodologies allow us to catalog the genome at ever-increasing granularity. In particular, long-read transcriptome sequencing enables us to identify large numbers of missing transcripts and to substantially improve existing models, and our long non-coding RNA catalogs have undergone a dramatic expansion and reconfiguration as a result.

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Addressing tobacco screening and treatment among racially and ethnically minoritized parents in pediatric clinics: barriers and facilitators.

Nicotine Tob Res

November 2024

Program in Health Disparities Research, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota, 717 Delaware Street SE, Suite 166, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55414, United States.

Article Synopsis
  • Household secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure is a serious health concern for racially and ethnically minoritized children in the U.S., and parental tobacco treatment during pediatric visits can help reduce this risk.
  • A study involving interviews with clinicians and health leaders in pediatric clinics revealed various facilitators and barriers to addressing parental tobacco use, including cultural and linguistic challenges as well as medical mistrust.
  • To improve care, it's crucial to enhance clinician training, provide culturally relevant resources, and streamline system processes to better support these families in reducing SHS exposure during pediatric preventive care.
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Mucopolysaccharidosis type IVA (MPS IVA) is an autosomal congenital metabolic lysosomal disease caused by a deficiency of the -acetyl-galactosamine-6-sulfate sulfatase (GALNS) gene, leading to severe skeletal dysplasia. The available therapeutics for patients with MPS IVA, enzyme replacement therapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, revealed limitations in the impact of skeletal lesions. Our previous study, a significant leap forward in MPS IVA research, showed that liver-targeted adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene transfer of human GALNS (hGALNS) restored GALNS enzymatic activity in blood and multiple tissues and partially improved the aberrant accumulation of storage materials.

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Examining institutional data from seven cohorts of students intending to major in biology across five research-intensive institutions, this work analyzes opportunity gaps-defined as the difference between the grade received by students from the dominant and nondominant sociodemographic groups in institutions of higher education-at the course-section level across mathematics, physics, biology, and chemistry disciplines. From this analysis, we find that the majority of course sections have large opportunity gaps between female and male students, students who are Black, Latino/a/e/x, or indigenous to the United States and its territories and students who are White or Asian, first-generation and non-first-generation students, and low-income and non-low-income students. This work provides a framework to analyze equity across institutions using robust methodology, including: using multiple approaches to measure grades, quantile regression rankscores which adjust for previous academic performance, and cluster analysis.

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This covers discovery and mechanistic aspects as well as initial applications of novel ionization processes for use in mass spectrometry that guided us in a series of subsequent discoveries, instrument developments, and commercialization. matrix-assisted ionization on an intermediate pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization source the use of a laser, high voltages, or any other added energy was simply unbelievable, at first. Individually and as a whole, the various discoveries and inventions started to paint, , an exciting new picture and outlook in mass spectrometry from which key developments grew that were at the time unimaginable, and continue to surprise us in its simplistic preeminence.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study shows that having too much visceral fat (VAT) is linked to heart disease and diabetes, while having more subcutaneous fat (SAT) might not be as bad if VAT is not high.
  • Scientists fed mice a high-fat diet to see how obesity affects specific fat types and found that obesity changes the way fat genes work.
  • They discovered that certain genes behave differently in SAT and VAT when mice are obese, and these genes could help us understand more about fat and health problems.
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Brain alpha-tocopherol (αT) concentration was previously reported to be inversely associated with neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) counts in specific brain structures from centenarians. However, the contribution of natural or synthetic αT stereoisomers to this relationship is unknown. In this study, αT stereoisomers were quantified in the temporal cortex (TC) of 47 centenarians in the Georgia Centenarian Study (age: 102.

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Dynamic changes in protein glycosylation impact human health and disease progression. However, current resources that capture disease and phenotype information focus primarily on the macromolecules within the central dogma of molecular biology (DNA, RNA, proteins). To gain a better understanding of organisms, there is a need to capture the functional impact of glycans and glycosylation on biological processes.

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Salt marsh grass () plays a crucial role in Delaware coastal regions by serving as a physical barrier between land and water along the inland bays and beaches. This vegetation helps to stabilize the shoreline and prevent erosion, protecting the land from the powerful forces of the waves and tides. In addition to providing a physical barrier, salt marsh grass is responsible for filtering nutrients in the water, offering an environment for aquatic species and presenting a focal point of study for high salt tolerance in plants.

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Mott-Insulator State of FeSe as a Van der Waals 2D Material Is Unveiled.

Phys Rev Lett

June 2024

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716, USA.

We undertook a comprehensive investigation of the electronic structure of FeSe, known as a Hund metal, and found that it is not uniquely defined. Through accounting for all two-particle irreducible diagrams constructed from electron Green's function G and screened Coulomb interaction W in a self-consistent manner, a Mott-insulator phase of 2D-FeSe is unveiled. The metal-insulator transition is driven by the strong on-site Coulomb interaction in its paramagnetic phase, accompanied by the weakening of both local and nonlocal screening effects on the Fe-3d orbitals.

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Social Determinants of Health in Cardio-Oncology: Multi-Level Strategies to Overcome Disparities in Care: State-of-the-Art Review.

JACC CardioOncol

June 2024

Social Determinants of Obesity and Cardiovascular Risk Laboratory, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.

Addressing the need for more equitable cardio-oncology care requires attention to existing disparities in cardio-oncologic disease prevention and outcomes. This is particularly important among those affected by adverse social determinants of health (SDOH). The intricate relationship of SDOH, cancer diagnosis, and outcomes from cardiotoxicities associated with oncologic therapies is influenced by sociopolitical, economic, and cultural factors.

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Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) include a range of abusive, neglectful, and dysfunctional household behaviors that are strongly associated with long-term health problems, mental health conditions, and societal difficulties. The study aims to uncover significant factors influencing ACEs in children aged 0-17 years and to propose a predictive model that can be used to forecast the likelihood of ACEs in children. Machine learning models are applied to identify and analyze the relationships between several predictors and the occurrence of ACEs.

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Article Synopsis
  • HIV stigma negatively impacts health outcomes like adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and engagement in HIV care, especially among men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) in Peru.
  • A study involving 400 MSM and TGW at specialized HIV clinics assessed various factors influencing ART adherence and care engagement.
  • Results showed that while some health factors were associated with good outcomes, stigma did not significantly affect ART adherence or care engagement when LGBTQ-affirming care was provided.
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Varying the position of phospholipid acyl chain unsaturation modulates hopanoid and sterol ordering.

Biophys J

July 2024

Technische Universität Dresden, B CUBE Center for Molecular Bioengineering, Dresden, Germany; Medical Faculty, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany. Electronic address:

The cell membrane must balance mechanical stability with fluidity to function as both a barrier and an organizational platform. Key to this balance is the ordering of hydrocarbon chains and the packing of lipids. Many eukaryotes synthesize sterols, which are uniquely capable of modulating the lipid order to decouple membrane stability from fluidity.

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MEMS-actuated terahertz metamaterials driven by phase-transition materials.

Front Optoelectron

May 2024

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 19716, USA.

The non-ionizing and penetrative characteristics of terahertz (THz) radiation have recently led to its adoption across a variety of applications. To effectively utilize THz radiation, modulators with precise control are imperative. While most recent THz modulators manipulate the amplitude, frequency, or phase of incident THz radiation, considerably less progress has been made toward THz polarization modulation.

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We explored associations among teachers' self-reported enjoyment for teaching mathematics, science, and English language arts and their students' self-reported behavioral engagement in each content area, and how these associations varied depending on student sex and socioeconomic status. Participants included 33 fourth-grade teachers and 443 students from 14 schools in the Southwestern United States. Multiple regression models with cluster robust standard errors was used.

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Art therapy masks reflect emotional changes in military personnel with PTSS.

Sci Rep

March 2024

Penn Center for Neuroaesthetics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA.

Among disabling post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) are irritability, aggressive behavior, distressing memories and general impaired cognition and negative mood. Art therapy interventions, including mask-making, can potentially alleviate these symptoms. We tested the hypothesis that art conveys emotions and predicted that blinded viewers would be able to perceive changes in theoretically derived emotional profiles expressed in art made by military personnel with PTSS from the onset to the end of therapy.

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The cell membrane must balance mechanical stability with fluidity to function as both a barrier and an organizational platform. Key to this balance is the thermodynamic ordering of lipids. Most Eukaryotes employ sterols, which are uniquely capable of modulating lipid order to decouple membrane stability from fluidity.

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Article Synopsis
  • In 2023, the NSF and NIH held a conference on computational modelling in neurorehabilitation to enhance collaboration among engineers, scientists, and clinicians to improve patient care.
  • The authors propose a patient-in-the-loop framework that utilizes ongoing measurements to refine diagnostic and treatment models, aiming for better functional outcomes and grounded in established health classifications.
  • They also explore current research and future directions in various areas of neurorehabilitation while emphasizing the need for model validation and addressing challenges for clinical implementation.
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