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Acta Materialia
ACTA MATERIALIA AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK TABLE OF CONTENTS XXX . • Description p.1 • Audience p.1 • Impact Factor p.1 • Abstracting and Indexing p.2 • Editorial Board p.2 • Guide for Authors p.4 ISSN: 1359-6454 DESCRIPTION . Acta Materialia provides a forum for publishing full-length, original papers and commissioned overviews that advance the in-depth understanding of the relationship between the processing, the structure and the properties of inorganic materials. Papers that have a high impact potential and/ or substantially advance the field are sought. The structure encompasses atomic and molecular arrangements, chemical and electronic structures, and microstructure. Emphasis is on either the mechanical or functional behavior of inorganic solids at all length scales down to nanostructures. The following aspects of the science and engineering of inorganic materials are of particular interest: (i) Cutting-edge experiments and theory as they relate to the understanding of the properties, (ii) Elucidation of the mechanisms involved in the synthesis and processing of materials specifically as they relate to the understanding of the properties,and (iii) Characterization of the structure and chemistry of materials specifically as it relates to the understanding of the properties. Acta Materialia welcomes papers that employ theory and/or simulation (or numerical methods) that substantially advance our understanding of the structure and properties of inorganic materials. Such papers should demonstrate relevance to the materials community by, for example, making a comparison with experimental results (in the literature or in the present study), making testable microstructural or property predictions or elucidating an important phenomenon. Papers that focus primarily on model parameter studies, development of methodology or those employing existing software packages to obtain standard or incremental results are discouraged. -
Presentations Iucr Enhanced Figure Toolkit
Integrating Data with Publications: Greater Interactivity and Challenges for Long-Term Preservation of the Scientific Record Brian McMahon International Union of Crystallography 5 Abbey Square Chester CH1 2HU UK [email protected] CODATA Conference 2010 International Union of Crystallography • International Scientific Union • Publishes 8 research journals: • Acta Crystallographica Section A: Foundations of Crystallography • Acta Crystallographica Section B: Structural Science • Acta Crystallographica Section C: Crystal Structure Communications • Acta Crystallographica Section D: Biological Crystallography • Acta Crystallographica Section E: Structure Reports Online • Acta Crystallographica Section F:Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications • Journal of Applied Crystallography • Journal of Synchrotron Radiation • Publishes major reference work International Tables for Crystallography (8 volumes) • Promotes standard crystallographic data file format (CIF) Crystallographic (X-ray diffraction) experiment Types of data relevant to publication Data can mean any or all of: 1. raw measurements from an experiment 2. processed numerical observations 3. derived structural information (1) 4. variable parameters in the experimental set-up or numerical modelling and interpretation 5. bibliographic and linking (2)(3) information We make no fundamental distinction between data and metadata – metadata are data that are of secondary interest to the current focus of attention. (4) (5) Why publish data? Some reasons: • To enhance the reproducibility -
Hygroscopicity of Pharmaceutical Crystals
HYGROSCOPICITY OF PHARMACEUTICAL CRYSTALS A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY DABING CHEN IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY RAJ SURYANARAYANAN (ADVISER) JANUARY, 2009 © Dabing Chen, January / 2009 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am very grateful to my thesis advisor, Prof. Raj Suryanarayanan, for his constant guidance, support, and encouragement throughout my research. Without his help, the completion of this thesis would be impossible. His friendship and advices are precious to my professional and personal growth and will help me overcome many difficulties in my future career. I would like to take the opportunity to thank Prof. David J.W. Grant, who was my advisor during the first three years in graduate school and led me into the research area of physical pharmacy. It was my great honor to have worked for him, and he will always live as a role model in my life. Many thanks to Dr. Zheng Jane Li at Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals (BI) for her invaluable advice as an industrial mentor and also for agreeing to serve on my committee. I sincerely appreciate her helpful discussions, revision of the manuscripts, and supervision of my research. I also want to thank her for providing me the internship opportunity at BI. I thank Dr. Timothy S. Wiedmann and Dr. Theodore P. Labuza for serving on my committee and for critically reviewing my thesis. I also want to thank Dr. Timothy S. Wiedmann for allowing me the use of the HPLC instruments in his lab and also for his advice as the Director of Graduate Studies. -
[3 TD$DIFF]Interdisciplinary Team Science in Cell Biology
TICB 1268 No. of Pages 3 Scientific Life Cell biology, beginning largely as micro- detailed physical–chemical mechanisms Interdisciplinary[3_TD$IF] scopic observations, followed[1_TD$IF]the molec- [7]. The data required for these models ular biology revolution, which viewed are now in sight. New gene editing meth- Team Science in genes, cells, and the machinery that ods are providing endogenous expression underlies their activities as molecular sys- of tagged and mutant cells [8], and new Cell Biology tems that could be fully characterized and live-cell imaging methods are promising Rick Horwitz1,* understood using methods of genetics biochemistry in living cells, measuring con- and biochemistry. Viewing the cell as a centrations, dynamics, equilibria, and complex, dynamic molecular composite organization [9]. Similarly, super-resolution The cell is complex. With its multi- brought insights from chemistry and phys- microscopy and cryoEM tomography, tude of components, spatial– ics to bear on biological problems. Just as which allow structure determination and [6_TD$IF] temporal character, and gene the molecular genetic era was codified by organization in situ [3,4], imaging mass expression diversity, it is challeng- the publication of Watson's book, Molec- spectrometry [10], and single-cell and ing to comprehend the cell as an ular Biology of the Gene [1], two decades spatially-resolved genomic approaches integrated system and to develop later[8_TD$IF]the Molecular Biology of the Cell by [11–13], among other image-based tech- models that predict its behaviors. I Alberts, et al. [2] served a similar purpose nologies, all point to a new golden era of suggest an approach to address for cell biology. -
Cancer Treatment and Survivorship Facts & Figures 2019-2021
Cancer Treatment & Survivorship Facts & Figures 2019-2021 Estimated Numbers of Cancer Survivors by State as of January 1, 2019 WA 386,540 NH MT VT 84,080 ME ND 95,540 59,970 38,430 34,360 OR MN 213,620 300,980 MA ID 434,230 77,860 SD WI NY 42,810 313,370 1,105,550 WY MI 33,310 RI 570,760 67,900 IA PA NE CT 243,410 NV 185,720 771,120 108,500 OH 132,950 NJ 543,190 UT IL IN 581,350 115,840 651,810 296,940 DE 55,460 CA CO WV 225,470 1,888,480 KS 117,070 VA MO MD 275,420 151,950 408,060 300,200 KY 254,780 DC 18,750 NC TN 470,120 AZ OK 326,530 NM 207,260 AR 392,530 111,620 SC 143,320 280,890 GA AL MS 446,900 135,260 244,320 TX 1,140,170 LA 232,100 AK 36,550 FL 1,482,090 US 16,920,370 HI 84,960 States estimates do not sum to US total due to rounding. Source: Surveillance Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute. Contents Introduction 1 Long-term Survivorship 24 Who Are Cancer Survivors? 1 Quality of Life 24 How Many People Have a History of Cancer? 2 Financial Hardship among Cancer Survivors 26 Cancer Treatment and Common Side Effects 4 Regaining and Improving Health through Healthy Behaviors 26 Cancer Survival and Access to Care 5 Concerns of Caregivers and Families 28 Selected Cancers 6 The Future of Cancer Survivorship in Breast (Female) 6 the United States 28 Cancers in Children and Adolescents 9 The American Cancer Society 30 Colon and Rectum 10 How the American Cancer Society Saves Lives 30 Leukemia and Lymphoma 12 Research 34 Lung and Bronchus 15 Advocacy 34 Melanoma of the Skin 16 Prostate 16 Sources of Statistics 36 Testis 17 References 37 Thyroid 19 Acknowledgments 45 Urinary Bladder 19 Uterine Corpus 21 Navigating the Cancer Experience: Treatment and Supportive Care 22 Making Decisions about Cancer Care 22 Cancer Rehabilitation 22 Psychosocial Care 23 Palliative Care 23 Transitioning to Long-term Survivorship 23 This publication attempts to summarize current scientific information about Global Headquarters: American Cancer Society Inc. -
Genomic Divergence and Brain Evolution: How Regulatory DNA Influences Development of the Cerebral Cortex
Prospects & Overviews Review essays Genomic divergence and brain evolution: How regulatory DNA influences development of the cerebral cortex Debra L. Silver1)2)3)4) The cerebral cortex controls our most distinguishing higher Introduction cognitive functions. Human-specific gene expression dif- ferences are abundant in the cerebral cortex, yet we have A large six-layered neocortex is a unique feature of only begun to understand how these variations impact brain mammalian brains. This specialized outer covering of the brain controls our higher cognitive functions including function. This review discusses the current evidence linking abstract thought and language, which together help uniquely non-coding regulatory DNA changes, including enhancers, define us as humans. Our distinguishing cognitive capacities with neocortical evolution. Functional interrogation using are specified within discrete cortical areas and are driven by animal models reveals converging roles for our genome in dynamic communication between neurons of the neocortex key aspects of cortical development including progenitor and other brain regions, as well as glial cell populations (including oligodendrocytes, microglia, and astrocytes). cell cycle and neuronal signaling. New technologies, Neurons are initially generated during human embryonic includingiPS cells and organoids, offerpotential alternatives and early fetal development, where they migrate to appropri- to modeling evolutionary modifications in a relevant species ate regions and begin establishing functional connections context. Several diseases rooted in the cerebral cortex during fetal and postnatal stages (Fig. 1). Disruptions to uniquely manifest in humans compared to other primates, cerebral cortex function arising during either development or thus highlighting the importance of understanding human adulthood, can result in neurodevelopmental and neurode- generative disorders. -
PATHOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A
FORMAT FOR SUBJECTWISE IDENTIFYING JOURNALS BY THE UNIVERSITIES AND APPROVAL OF THE UGC {Under Clause 6.05 (1) of the University Grants Commission (Minimum Qualifications for appointment of Teacher and Other Academic Staff in Universities and Colleges and Measures for the Maintenance of Standards in Higher Education (4th Amendment), Regulations, 2016} Subject: PATHOLOGY, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences A. Refereed Journals Sl. Name of the Journal Publisher and Year of Hard e-publication ISSN Number Peer / Indexing status. Impact Do you use Any other No. place of Start copies (Yes/No) Refree If indexed, Factor/Rating. any Information publication published Reviewed Name of the Name of the IF exclusion (Yes/No) (Yes/No) indexing data assigning agency. criteria for base Whether covered Research by Thompson & Journals Reuter (Yes/No) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 Acta cytologica Karger, Basel 1957 Yes Yes 0001-5547(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 1.562 (Impact (Switzerland) 1938- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson 2650(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 0001-5547(Linking) 2 Acta oncologica Informa Healthcare, 1987 No Yes 0284-186X(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 3.730 (Impact London (England) 1651- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson 226X(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 0284-186X(Linking) 3 Advances in anatomic pathology Lippincott Williams 1994 Yes Yes 1072-4109(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 2.919 (Impact & Wilkins, 1533- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson Hagerstown, MD 4031(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 1072-4109(Linking) 4 American journal of clinical oncology Lippincott Williams 1982 Yes Yes 0277-3732(Print); Yes Indexed (Index 2.977 (Impact & Wilkins, 1537- medicus, Medline, Factor by Thomson Hagerstown, MD 453X(Electronic); Pubmed) Reuters) 0277-3732(Linking) Sl. -
MOLECULAR CLOCKS Definition Introduction
MOLECULAR CLOCKS 583 Kishino, H., Thorne, J. L., and Bruno, W. J., 2001. Performance of Thorne, J. L., Kishino, H., and Painter, I. S., 1998. Estimating the a divergence time estimation method under a probabilistic model rate of evolution of the rate of molecular evolution. Molecular of rate evolution. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 18,352–361. Biology and Evolution, 15, 1647–1657. Kodandaramaiah, U., 2011. Tectonic calibrations in molecular dat- Warnock, R. C. M., Yang, Z., Donoghue, P. C. J., 2012. Exploring ing. Current Zoology, 57,116–124. uncertainty in the calibration of the molecular clock. Biology Marshall, C. R., 1997. Confidence intervals on stratigraphic ranges Letters, 8, 156–159. with nonrandom distributions of fossil horizons. Paleobiology, Wilkinson, R. D., Steiper, M. E., Soligo, C., Martin, R. D., Yang, Z., 23, 165–173. and Tavaré, S., 2011. Dating primate divergences through an Müller, J., and Reisz, R. R., 2005. Four well-constrained calibration integrated analysis of palaeontological and molecular data. Sys- points from the vertebrate fossil record for molecular clock esti- tematic Biology, 60,16–31. mates. Bioessays, 27, 1069–1075. Yang, Z., and Rannala, B., 2006. Bayesian estimation of species Parham, J. F., Donoghue, P. C. J., Bell, C. J., et al., 2012. Best practices divergence times under a molecular clock using multiple fossil for justifying fossil calibrations. Systematic Biology, 61,346–359. calibrations with soft bounds. Molecular Biology and Evolution, Peters, S. E., 2005. Geologic constraints on the macroevolutionary 23, 212–226. history of marine animals. Proceedings of the National Academy Zuckerkandl, E., and Pauling, L., 1962. Molecular disease, evolution of Sciences, 102, 12326–12331. -
SCIENCE CITATION INDEX EXPANDED - JOURNAL LIST Total Journals: 8631
SCIENCE CITATION INDEX EXPANDED - JOURNAL LIST Total journals: 8631 1. 4OR-A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH 2. AAPG BULLETIN 3. AAPS JOURNAL 4. AAPS PHARMSCITECH 5. AATCC REVIEW 6. ABDOMINAL IMAGING 7. ABHANDLUNGEN AUS DEM MATHEMATISCHEN SEMINAR DER UNIVERSITAT HAMBURG 8. ABSTRACT AND APPLIED ANALYSIS 9. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY 10. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 11. ACADEMIC MEDICINE 12. ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS 13. ACADEMIC RADIOLOGY 14. ACCOUNTABILITY IN RESEARCH-POLICIES AND QUALITY ASSURANCE 15. ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH 16. ACCREDITATION AND QUALITY ASSURANCE 17. ACI MATERIALS JOURNAL 18. ACI STRUCTURAL JOURNAL 19. ACM COMPUTING SURVEYS 20. ACM JOURNAL ON EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS 21. ACM SIGCOMM COMPUTER COMMUNICATION REVIEW 22. ACM SIGPLAN NOTICES 23. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON ALGORITHMS 24. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED PERCEPTION 25. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON ARCHITECTURE AND CODE OPTIMIZATION 26. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON AUTONOMOUS AND ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS 27. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTATIONAL LOGIC 28. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER SYSTEMS 29. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER-HUMAN INTERACTION 30. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON DATABASE SYSTEMS 31. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON DESIGN AUTOMATION OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS 32. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON EMBEDDED COMPUTING SYSTEMS 33. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS 34. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION AND SYSTEM SECURITY 35. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS 36. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY 37. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON INTERNET TECHNOLOGY 38. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY FROM DATA 39. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON MATHEMATICAL SOFTWARE 40. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON MODELING AND COMPUTER SIMULATION 41. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON MULTIMEDIA COMPUTING COMMUNICATIONS AND APPLICATIONS 42. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES AND SYSTEMS 43. ACM TRANSACTIONS ON RECONFIGURABLE TECHNOLOGY AND SYSTEMS 44. -
Lead Isotope Analysis of Geological Native Copper: Implications for Archaeological Provenance Research in the North American Arctic and Subarctic
minerals Article Lead Isotope Analysis of Geological Native Copper: Implications for Archaeological Provenance Research in the North American Arctic and Subarctic H. Kory Cooper 1,* and Antonio Simonetti 2 1 Department of Anthropology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA 2 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: The Indigenous inhabitants of Arctic and Subarctic North America had been using native copper for several centuries prior to sustained interaction with Europeans beginning in the 18th century. The connection, if any, between the use of copper in these two adjacent regions is, at present, unclear. The ability to determine the source of native copper artifacts found in greater northwestern North America would inform on the movement of copper via trade and exchange between, and aid in understanding the innovation and diffusion of native copper metallurgy among, ancestral Dene and Inuit People. This paper provides the results of a Lead Isotope Analysis (LIA) pilot study examining Pb isotope ratios of native copper samples from multiple locations in the northern regions of North America. The results from this preliminary study indicate some overlap in Pb isotope ratios between Arctic and Subarctic sources of native copper, and these nonetheless record distinct isotope signatures relative to those associated with other North American native Cu deposits. Citation: Cooper, H.K.; Simonetti, A. Keywords: native copper; lead isotope analysis; provenance; arctic; subarctic; archaeometallurgy Lead Isotope Analysis of Geological Native Copper: Implications for Archaeological Provenance Research in the North American Arctic and 1. -
Data Journals: Incentivizing Data Access and Documentation Within the Scholarly Communication System
Insights – 33, 2020 Data journals: incentivizing data access and documentation | William H Walters Data journals: incentivizing data access and documentation within the scholarly communication system Data journals provide strong incentives for data creators to verify, document and disseminate their data. They also bring data access and documentation into the mainstream of scholarly communication, rewarding data creators through existing mechanisms of peer-reviewed publication and citation tracking. These same advantages are not generally associated with data repositories, or with conventional journals’ data-sharing mandates. This article describes the unique advantages of data journals. It also examines the data journal landscape, presenting the characteristics of 13 data journals in the fields of biology, environmental science, chemistry, medicine and health sciences. These journals vary considerably in size, scope, publisher characteristics, length of data reports, data hosting policies, time from submission to first decision, article processing charges, bibliographic index coverage and citation impact. They are similar, however, in their peer review criteria, their open access license terms and the characteristics of their editorial boards. Keywords data journals; data repositories; incentives; open access; open data Introduction The benefits of free, unmediated access to research data are widely acknowledged, especially in the life sciences. Despite mandates from both funding agencies and publishers, however, open data initiatives -
Comparative Bibliometric Analysis of Publications From
COMPARATIVE BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF PUBLICATIONS FROM AUSTRALIAN NUCLEAR SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY ORGANISATION (ANSTO), PAUL SCHERRER INSTITUTE (PSI), KOREA ATOMIC ENERGY RESEARCH INSTITUTE (KAERI) AND, SHANGHAI INSTITUTE OF APPLIED PHYSICS (SINAP) Prepared by: Dr Berenika M. Webster 1 August 2011 Page 1 Contents 1.Executive summary ............................................................................................................ 3 2. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 5 3. Methodology ..................................................................................................................... 6 Data source and benchmarks ............................................................................................ 6 Analyses ............................................................................................................................ 6 Productivity Measures: ................................................................................................... 6 Recognition & Influence Measures: ................................................................................ 6 Efficiency Measures: ...................................................................................................... 6 Trend Analysis Measures: .............................................................................................. 7 Impact Factor: ...............................................................................................................