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Updates from the Literature, September/October 2016 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Journal of midwifery & women's health
Periodical, Abbrev.
J.Midwifery Womens Health
Pub Date Free Form
12-Aug
Volume
Issue
Start Page
Other Pages
Notes
LR: 20160812; JID: 100909407; 2016/07/07 [received]; 2016/07/07 [accepted]; aheadofprint
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
1542-2011; 1526-9523
Accession Number
PMID: 27518761
Language
ENG
SubFile
JOURNAL ARTICLE
DOI
10.1111/jmwh.12524 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27518761
Abstract
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Faucher,M.A.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20160812
PMCID
Editors
Visual Analysis of MOOC Forums with iForum 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
Periodical, Abbrev.
IEEE Trans.Vis.Comput.Graph.
Pub Date Free Form
5-Aug
Volume
Issue
Start Page
Other Pages
Notes
LR: 20160811; JID: 9891704; aheadofprint
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
1941-0506; 1077-2626
Accession Number
PMID: 27514047
Language
ENG
SubFile
JOURNAL ARTICLE
DOI
10.1109/TVCG.2016.2598444 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27514047
Abstract
Discussion forums of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) provide great opportunities for students to interact with instructional staff as well as other students. Exploration of MOOC forum data can offer valuable insights for these staff to enhance the course and prepare the next release. However, it is challenging due to the large, complicated, and heterogeneous nature of relevant datasets, which contain multiple dynamically interacting objects such as users, posts, and threads, each one including multiple attributes. In this paper, we present a design study for developing an interactive visual analytics system, called iForum, that allows for effectively discovering and understanding temporal patterns in MOOC forums. The design study was conducted with three domain experts in an iterative manner over one year, including a MOOC instructor and two official teaching assistants. iForum offers a set of novel visualization designs for presenting the three interleaving aspects of MOOC forums (i.e., posts, users, and threads) at three different scales. To demonstrate the effectiveness and usefulness of iForum, we describe a case study involving field experts, in which they use iForum to investigate real MOOC forum data for a course on JAVA programming.
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Fu,S., Zhao,J., Cui,W., Qu,H.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20160805
PMCID
Editors
Supply-demand equilibria and the size-number trade-off in spatially structured recreational fisheries 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America
Periodical, Abbrev.
Ecol.Appl.
Pub Date Free Form
Jun
Volume
26
Issue
4
Start Page
1086
Other Pages
1097
Notes
JID: 9889808; ppublish
Place of Publication
United States
ISSN/ISBN
1051-0761; 1051-0761
Accession Number
PMID: 27509750
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; IM
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27509750
Abstract
Recreational fishing effort varies across complex inland landscapes (e.g., lake-districts) and appears influenced by both angler preferences and qualities of the fishery resource, like fish size and abundance. However, fish size and abundance have an ecological trade-off within a population, thereby structuring equal-quality isopleths expressing this trade-off across the fishing landscape. Since expressed preferences of recreational anglers (i.e., site-selection of high-quality fishing opportunities among many lakes) can be analogous to optimal foraging strategies of natural predators, adopting such concepts can aid in understanding scale-dependence in fish-angler interactions and impacts of fishing across broad landscapes. Here, we assumed a fish supply-angler demand equilibria and adapted a novel bivariate measure of fishing quality based on fish size and catch rates to assess how recreational anglers influence fishing quality among a complex inland landscape. We then applied this metric to evaluate (1) angler preferences for caught and released fish compared to harvested fish, (2) the nonlinear size-numbers trade-off with uncertainty in both traits, and (3) the spatial-scale of the equilibria across 62 lakes and four independent management regions in British Columbia's (BC) rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss fishery. We found anglers had low preference for caught and released fish (~10% of the value compared to harvested fish), which modified anglers' perception of fishing quality. Hence, fishing quality and angler effort was not influenced simply by total fish caught, but largely by harvested fish catch rates. Fishing quality varied from BC's northern regions (larger fish and more abundant) compared to southern regions (smaller fish and less abundant) directly associated with a 2.5 times increase in annual fishing effort in southern regions, suggesting that latent fishing pressure can structure the size-numbers trade-off in rainbow trout populations. The presence of two different equal-quality isopleths suggests at least two effective landscapes support co-occurring ideal free distributions of recreational fishing effort in BC's rainbow fishery. Anglers' expressed preferences among lakes interacted with density dependent growth and survival within lakes to structure a size-numbers trade-off influencing how anglers perceive fishing quality and, ultimately, distribute across complex inland landscapes.
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Authors
Wilson,K.L., Cantin,A., Ward,H.G., Newton,E.R., Mee,J.A., Varkey,D.A., Parkinson,E.A., Post,J.R.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
AJPH Global News 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
American Journal of Public Health
Periodical, Abbrev.
Am.J.Public Health
Pub Date Free Form
Sep
Volume
106
Issue
9
Start Page
1527
Other Pages
Notes
JID: 1254074; ppublish
Place of Publication
United States
ISSN/ISBN
1541-0048; 0090-0036
Accession Number
PMID: 27509273
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; AIM; IM
DOI
10.2105/AJPH.2016.303329 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27509273
Abstract
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Tweets of the week 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)
Periodical, Abbrev.
Nurs.Stand.
Pub Date Free Form
10-Aug
Volume
30
Issue
50
Start Page
30
Other Pages
Notes
LR: 20160810; JID: 9012906; ppublish
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
2047-9018; 0029-6570
Accession Number
PMID: 27507378
Language
ENG
SubFile
JOURNAL ARTICLE
DOI
10.7748/ns.30.50.30.s32 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27507378
Abstract
Nurses on Twitter.
Descriptors
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Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Smoking less does not equal drinking more 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)
Periodical, Abbrev.
Nurs.Stand.
Pub Date Free Form
10-Aug
Volume
30
Issue
50
Start Page
17
Other Pages
Notes
JID: 9012906; ppublish
Place of Publication
England
ISSN/ISBN
2047-9018; 0029-6570
Accession Number
PMID: 27507371
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; N
DOI
10.7748/ns.30.50.17.s20 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27507371
Abstract
The common conception that people giving up smoking drink more alcohol to compensate has been questioned by a study.
Descriptors
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Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Blunted response: smoke, illicit substances, and how babies breathe 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
The Journal of pediatrics
Periodical, Abbrev.
J.Pediatr.
Pub Date Free Form
Aug
Volume
175
Issue
Start Page
1
Other Pages
4
Notes
JID: 0375410; ppublish
Place of Publication
United States
ISSN/ISBN
1097-6833; 0022-3476
Accession Number
PMID: 27507312
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; AIM; IM
DOI
10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.06.008 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27507312
Abstract
Descriptors
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Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Wright,C.J.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
WGO La Paz Training Center and Gastro 2016: EGHS-WGO International Congress in Abu Dhabi 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Journal of clinical gastroenterology
Periodical, Abbrev.
J.Clin.Gastroenterol.
Pub Date Free Form
Sep
Volume
50
Issue
8
Start Page
i
Other Pages
ii
Notes
JID: 7910017; ppublish
Place of Publication
United States
ISSN/ISBN
1539-2031; 0192-0790
Accession Number
PMID: 27505232
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; IM
DOI
10.1097/MCG.0000000000000600 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27505232
Abstract
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Formation of Halogenated By-products in Co(2)(+) Activated Peroxymonosulfate Oxidation Process 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Huan jing ke xue= Huanjing kexue / [bian ji, Zhongguo ke xue yuan huan jing ke xue wei yuan hui "Huan jing ke xue" bian ji wei yuan hui.]
Periodical, Abbrev.
Huan Jing Ke Xue.
Pub Date Free Form
15-May
Volume
37
Issue
5
Start Page
1823
Other Pages
1830
Notes
JID: 8405344; ppublish
Place of Publication
China
ISSN/ISBN
0250-3301; 0250-3301
Accession Number
PMID: 27506036
Language
chi
SubFile
English Abstract; Journal Article; IM
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
27506036
Abstract
Sulfate radicals (SO(4).(-)) generated by Co(2)(+) catalyzed activation of peroxymonosulfate (PMS) are highly oxidative and can be applied to degrade various organic pollutants. It was revealed in this research that bromide could be transformed in this process to reactive bromine species which reacted with phenol subsequently, leading to the formation of bromophenols and brominated by-products such as bromoform and dibromoacetic acid. The formation of the brominated by-products first increased and then decreased. The maximum yields of bromoform (10.3 micromol . L(-)(1)) and dibromoacetic acid (14.6 micromol . L(-)(1)) occurred at approximately 8 h with initial phenol, PMS, Br(-), Co(2)(+), concentrations of 0.05, 1.0, 0.2, and 5 micromol . L(-)(1), respectively. Formation of the brominated by-products decreased with increasing pH. With constant total halides, increasing Cl(-)/Br(-) ratio decreased the total formation of halogenated by- products but generated more chlorinated byproducts. The findings of this research can provide valuable information in assessing the feasibility of SO(4).(-) based oxidation technologies in real practice.
Descriptors
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Authors
Liu,K., Jin,H., Dong,W., Ji,Y.F., Lu,J.H.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
The changing tobacco landscape: What dental professionals need to know 2016
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Journal of the American Dental Association (1939)
Periodical, Abbrev.
J.Am.Dent.Assoc.
Pub Date Free Form
Jul
Volume
147
Issue
7
Start Page
561
Other Pages
569
Notes
LR: 20160630; CI: Copyright (c) 2016; GR: KL2 TR000143/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States; JID: 7503060; NIHMS772669; OID: NLM: NIHMS772669 [Available on 07/01/17]; OID: NLM: PMC4925234 [Available on 07/01/17]; OTO: NOTNLM; PMCR: 2017/07/01 00:00; 2015/10/01
Place of Publication
England
ISSN/ISBN
1943-4723; 0002-8177
Accession Number
PMID: 26988178
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; D; IM
DOI
10.1016/j.adaj.2016.01.008 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
26988178
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tobacco products in the United States and the patterns of tobacco use are changing. Although cigarette smoking prevalence has declined, dental professionals are likely to encounter substantial numbers of patients who have tried and are continuing to use new and alternative tobacco products, including cigars, water pipes (hookahs), and electronic cigarettes, as well as conventional and new smokeless tobacco products. METHODS: The authors reviewed conventional and new tobacco products in the United States, their adverse oral and systemic health effects, and their prevalence of use. RESULTS: Tobacco products other than cigarettes account for a substantial portion of tobacco use. For this reason, tobacco-use prevention and cessation counseling provided by dental health care professionals must address all tobacco products, including cigarettes, cigars, water pipes, and electronic cigarettes, as well as conventional and new smokeless tobacco products. Cigarette smoking and smokeless tobacco use are associated with immediate and long-term adverse health effects, including nicotine addiction, oral and systemic disease, and death. Novel products may attract new tobacco users, potentially leading to addiction that results in enduring tobacco product use and associated adverse health effects. CONCLUSIONS: This critical review of conventional, new, and emerging tobacco products presents information that dental professionals can use in providing tobacco-related counseling to patients who use or who are at risk for using tobacco products. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS: It is essential that dental professionals are knowledgeable about tobacco products and are able to answer patients' questions and provide them with evidence-based tobacco-related counseling. This information may prevent patients from initiating use or help reduce or cease use to avoid immediate and long-term adverse health effects, including nicotine addiction, oral and systemic disease, and death.
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
American Dental Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Data Source
Authors
Couch,E.T., Chaffee,B.W., Gansky,S.A., Walsh,M.M.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20160314
PMCID
PMC4925234
Editors