|
|
Creator | Title | Description | Subject | Date |
1 |
|
Kestle, John R. W. | Natural history of cerebral cavernous malformations | To determine the natural history of brain cavernous malformations, the authors entered patients referred to their center into a prospective registry between 1987 and 1993. All patients underwent magnetic resonance imaging, which showed the typical appearance of this lesion, and conservative manageme... | Cavernous malformation; Vascular malformation; Seizure | 1995 |
2 |
|
Silverman, Randy | Bernard C. Middleton, MBE (1924-2019): | Bernard Chester Middleton was born in London in 1924 to Doris Hilda Webster, a secretary to a well-known barrister, and Regent Marcus Geoffrey Middleton, a talented bookbinder. At the age of thirteen in 1938, Bernard earned a trade scholarship to attend the Central School of Arts and Crafts in Londo... | | 1995 |
3 |
|
Kestle, John R. W. | Simple risk predictions for arteriovenous malformation hemorrhage | WE PRESENT A simple risk prediction formula for arteriovenous malformation hemorrhage. Natural history studies have shown an annual risk of hemorrhage of 2 to 4% for patients with brain arteriovenous malformations. Although decision analysis programs and biostatistical models are available to predic... | Arteriovenous malformation; Hemorrhage risk; Prediction formula | 1995 |
4 |
|
Maloney, Thomas N. | Degrees of inequality: the advance of black male workers in the northern meat packing and steel industries before World War II | Recent major works on long-term racial inequality in the labor market revolve around competing hypotheses concerning the importance of human capital factors (Smith and Welch 1989) and government policy (Donohue and Heckman 1991) in promoting black advance. There is however, another line or thinking ... | Labor markets; Northern employers; Racial inequality | 1995 |
5 |
|
Kestle, John R. W. | Reduction of hemorrhage risk after stereotactic radiosurgery for cavernous malformations | The benefits of radiosurgery for cavernous malformations are difficult to assess because of the unclear natural history of this vascular lesion, the inability to image malformation vessels, and the lack of an imaging technique that defines "cure." The authors selected for radiosurgery 47 patients w... | Cavernous malformation; Gamma knife; Stereotactic radiosurgery | 1995 |
6 |
|
Rogers, Alan R.; Jorde, Lynn B. | Genetic evidence on modern human origins | A review of genetic evidence leads to the following conclusions concerning human population history: (1) Between 33,000 and 150,000 years ago the human population expanded from an initial size of perhaps 10,000 breeding individuals, reaching a size of at least 300,000. (2) Although the initial popu... | Population history; Mitochondrial DNA; Mismatch distribution; Intermatch distribution; Replacement hypothesis; Population bottlenecks | 1995 |
7 |
|
Rogers, Alan R. | Genetic evidence for a Pleistocene population explosion | Expansions of population size leave characteristic signatures in mitochondrial "mismatch distributions." Consequently, these distributions can inform us about the history of changes in population size. Here, I study a simple model of population history that assumes that, t generations before the pr... | | 1995 |
8 |
|
Silverman, Randall H. | Fiber and talent intertwine at Twinrocker | Seventeenth century philosopher John Locke compared the newborn human mind to a blank sheet of paper, a page devoid of any mark, ready to receive on its surface the unique characters of an individual's soul and circumstance. As history demonstrates, not all minds-or sheets of paper-are created equal... | Twinrocker Homemade Paper; Mold-made paper; Papermaking | 1995 |
9 |
|
Maloney, Thomas N. | Making the effort: the racial contours of Detroit's labor markets, 1920-1940 | In 1940 the Ford Motor Company employed half of the black men in Detroit but only 14 percent of the whites. The authors postulate that black Detroiters were concentrated at Ford because they were excluded from working elsewhere. Those most affected were young married black men. A Ford job was vir... | Automotive workers - Black people; Ford Motor Company | 1995 |
10 |
|
Warner, Homer R. | Computerized Practice Guidelines for Heart Failure Management: The HeartMan System | Biomedical Informatics | | 1995 |
11 |
|
Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah | IAIMS Newsletter October 1995 | The IAIMS Newsletter provides valuable information about Library activities and resources as well as informative articles related to information technology. | IAIMS | 1995 |
12 |
|
Gardner, Reed M. | Detection of Biologic Signals | Biomedical Informatics | | 1995 |
13 |
|
Warner, Homer R. | Enroute Toward a Computer-Based Patient Record: The ACIS Project | Biomedical Informatics | | 1995 |
14 |
|
Warner, Homer R. | A Computer-Based Diagnostic Model for Individual Case Review | Biomedical Informatics | | 1995 |
15 |
|
Miller, Joel Steven; Epstein, Arthur J. | Magnetic behavior of octaethylporphyrinatomanganese(III) tetracyanoethenide, [MnOEP][TCNE], and hexacyanobutadienide, [MnOEP][C4(CN)6]: the importance of a uniform chain for stabilizing strong effective ferromagnetic coupling | [MnOEP][A] {A=[TCNE]'- and [C4(CN)6]'-} have been isolated as extended 1D coordination polymers with trans-U2"[A] bridging ligands with strong {A=[C4(CN)6].-} and weak {A=TCNE].-} ferromagnetic coupling as evidenced from the fit of the magnetic susceptibility to the Curie-Weiss law (0=5.1 and 67.1 K... | Crystals; Inversion; Coupling | 1995 |
16 |
|
Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah | IAIMS Newsletter November 1995 | The IAIMS Newsletter provides valuable information about Library activities and resources as well as informative articles related to information technology. | IAIMS | 1995 |
17 |
|
Couldwell, William T. | Ventroposterior medial pallidotomy in patients with advanced Parkinson's disease | IN A PRELIMINARY study, the effects of ventroposterior medial pallidotomy were evaluated in five patients with advanced Parkinson's disease in whom medical therapy had failed. The mean age was 67.0 ? 5.6 years, and t h e mean Hoelin and Yahr stage when "off" was 3.9 ? 1.3. Three patients received u... | Pallidotomy; Dyskinesia; Stereotaxy; Postoperative morbidity | 1995 |
18 |
|
Kriesel, John D. | Miliary Tuberculosis and the postpartum state | In 1985, a resurgence of tuberculosis began in the United States. In conjunction with this resurgence, there has been an increase in the number of atypical presentations of the disease. We recently treated a patient who had disseminated tuberculosis that became manifest in the postpartum state. Wher... | Miliary tuberculosis; Postpartum | 1995 |
19 |
|
Rogers, Alan R.; Jorde, Lynn B. | Origins and affinities of modern humans: a comparison of mitochondrial and nuclear genetic data | To test hypotheses about the origin of modern humans, we analyzed mtDNA sequences, 30 nuclear restriction-site polymorphisms (RSPs), and 30 tetranucleotide short tandem repeat (STR) polymorphisms in 243 Africans, Asians, and Europeans. An evolutionary tree based on mtDNA displays deep African branch... | Base Sequence; Variation (Genetics); Base Sequence | 1995 |
20 |
|
Efros, Alexei L. | Sensor-based distributed control scheme for mobile robots | In this paper we present a sensor-based distributed control scheme for mobile robots. This scheme combines centralized and decentralized control strategies. A server-client model is used to implement this scheme where the server is a process that caries out the commands to be executed, and each clie... | Sensor-based; Distributed control scheme | 1995 |
21 |
|
Brunvand, Erik L. | Precise exception handling for a self-timed processor | Self-timed systems structured as multiple concurrent processes and communicating through self-timed queues are a convenient way to implement decoupled computer architectures. Machines of this type can exploit instruction level parallelism in a natural way, and can be easily modified and extended... | | 1995 |
22 |
|
Mallat, Chibli | Three Recent Decisions of the Yemeni Supreme Court | Despite a rich history, beginning with the Ottoman constitutional movement in the latter part of the nineteenth century and that of Qajar Iran at the beginning of the twentieth, Middle Eastern constitutions have a propensity to turn into dead letters. Unless and until constitu- tional watchdogs begi... | | 1995 |
23 |
|
Henderson, Thomas C. | Evolutionary teleomorphology | The physical layout of organs and neural structures in biological systems is important to their functioning, and is the result of evolutionary selection forces. We believe this is true even at the individual neuron level, and should be accounted for in any bio-based approach. In particular, when tr... | Evolutionary teleomorphology; Bio-based approach; Physical layout problem; PLP; Neurons; Nodes | 1995 |
24 |
|
Clayton, Dale H. | New genus and three new species of chewing lice (Phthiraptera: Philopteridae) from Peruvian ovenbirds (Passeriformes: Furnariidae) | The new genus Furnariphilus is described to include three new species from Peruvian hosts within the passerine family Furnariidae, subfamily Furnariinae: F. pagei, the type species of the genus, from Furnarius leucopus Swainson; F. griffithsi from Sclerurus mexicanus Sclater; and F. parkeri from Scl... | Chewing lice; Peruvian ovenbirds; Phthiraptera; Furnariphilus; Ectoparasites; Peru; Furnarius leucopus; Sclerurus mexicanus; Sclerurus caudacutus | 1995 |
25 |
|
Millgram, Elijah | Was Hume a Humean? | When it comes to talking about practical reasoning, "Humean" is a synonym for "instrumentalist." That is, a "Humean" view of practical reasoning is one on which only means-end reasoning directed toward satisfying antecedently given desires counts as practical reasoning at all. Witness, for instance... | Humean; Humeanism | 1995 |