Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:J. Vickery)

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  1. 1
    S. Sawcer ; G. Hellenthal ; M. Pirinen ; C. C. Spencer ; N. A. Patsopoulos ; L. Moutsianas ; A. Dilthey ; Z. Su ; C. Freeman ; S. E. Hunt ; S. Edkins ; E. Gray ; D. R. Booth ; S. C. Potter ; A. Goris ; G. Band ; A. B. Oturai ; A. Strange ; J. Saarela ; C. Bellenguez ; B. Fontaine ; M. Gillman ; B. Hemmer ; R. Gwilliam ; F. Zipp ; A. Jayakumar ; R. Martin ; S. Leslie ; S. Hawkins ; E. Giannoulatou ; S. D'Alfonso ; H. Blackburn ; F. Martinelli Boneschi ; J. Liddle ; H. F. Harbo ; M. L. Perez ; A. Spurkland ; M. J. Waller ; M. P. Mycko ; M. Ricketts ; M. Comabella ; N. Hammond ; I. Kockum ; O. T. McCann ; M. Ban ; P. Whittaker ; A. Kemppinen ; P. Weston ; C. Hawkins ; S. Widaa ; J. Zajicek ; S. Dronov ; N. Robertson ; S. J. Bumpstead ; L. F. Barcellos ; R. Ravindrarajah ; R. Abraham ; L. Alfredsson ; K. Ardlie ; C. Aubin ; A. Baker ; K. Baker ; S. E. Baranzini ; L. Bergamaschi ; R. Bergamaschi ; A. Bernstein ; A. Berthele ; M. Boggild ; J. P. Bradfield ; D. Brassat ; S. A. Broadley ; D. Buck ; H. Butzkueven ; R. Capra ; W. M. Carroll ; P. Cavalla ; E. G. Celius ; S. Cepok ; R. Chiavacci ; F. Clerget-Darpoux ; K. Clysters ; G. Comi ; M. Cossburn ; I. Cournu-Rebeix ; M. B. Cox ; W. Cozen ; B. A. Cree ; A. H. Cross ; D. Cusi ; M. J. Daly ; E. Davis ; P. I. de Bakker ; M. Debouverie ; B. D'Hooghe M ; K. Dixon ; R. Dobosi ; B. Dubois ; D. Ellinghaus ; I. Elovaara ; F. Esposito ; C. Fontenille ; S. Foote ; A. Franke ; D. Galimberti ; A. Ghezzi ; J. Glessner ; R. Gomez ; O. Gout ; C. Graham ; S. F. Grant ; F. R. Guerini ; H. Hakonarson ; P. Hall ; A. Hamsten ; H. P. Hartung ; R. N. Heard ; S. Heath ; J. Hobart ; M. Hoshi ; C. Infante-Duarte ; G. Ingram ; W. Ingram ; T. Islam ; M. Jagodic ; M. Kabesch ; A. G. Kermode ; T. J. Kilpatrick ; C. Kim ; N. Klopp ; K. Koivisto ; M. Larsson ; M. Lathrop ; J. S. Lechner-Scott ; M. A. Leone ; V. Leppa ; U. Liljedahl ; I. L. Bomfim ; R. R. Lincoln ; J. Link ; J. Liu ; A. R. Lorentzen ; S. Lupoli ; F. Macciardi ; T. Mack ; M. Marriott ; V. Martinelli ; D. Mason ; J. L. McCauley ; F. Mentch ; I. L. Mero ; T. Mihalova ; X. Montalban ; J. Mottershead ; K. M. Myhr ; P. Naldi ; W. Ollier ; A. Page ; A. Palotie ; J. Pelletier ; L. Piccio ; T. Pickersgill ; F. Piehl ; S. Pobywajlo ; H. L. Quach ; P. P. Ramsay ; M. Reunanen ; R. Reynolds ; J. D. Rioux ; M. Rodegher ; S. Roesner ; J. P. Rubio ; I. M. Ruckert ; M. Salvetti ; E. Salvi ; A. Santaniello ; C. A. Schaefer ; S. Schreiber ; C. Schulze ; R. J. Scott ; F. Sellebjerg ; K. W. Selmaj ; D. Sexton ; L. Shen ; B. Simms-Acuna ; S. Skidmore ; P. M. Sleiman ; C. Smestad ; P. S. Sorensen ; H. B. Sondergaard ; J. Stankovich ; R. C. Strange ; A. M. Sulonen ; E. Sundqvist ; A. C. Syvanen ; F. Taddeo ; B. Taylor ; J. M. Blackwell ; P. Tienari ; E. Bramon ; A. Tourbah ; M. A. Brown ; E. Tronczynska ; J. P. Casas ; N. Tubridy ; A. Corvin ; J. Vickery ; J. Jankowski ; P. Villoslada ; H. S. Markus ; K. Wang ; C. G. Mathew ; J. Wason ; C. N. Palmer ; H. E. Wichmann ; R. Plomin ; E. Willoughby ; A. Rautanen ; J. Winkelmann ; M. Wittig ; R. C. Trembath ; J. Yaouanq ; A. C. Viswanathan ; H. Zhang ; N. W. Wood ; R. Zuvich ; P. Deloukas ; C. Langford ; A. Duncanson ; J. R. Oksenberg ; M. A. Pericak-Vance ; J. L. Haines ; T. Olsson ; J. Hillert ; A. J. Ivinson ; P. L. De Jager ; L. Peltonen ; G. J. Stewart ; D. A. Hafler ; S. L. Hauser ; G. McVean ; P. Donnelly ; A. Compston
    Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
    Published 2011
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2011-08-13
    Publisher:
    Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
    Print ISSN:
    0028-0836
    Electronic ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Keywords:
    Alleles ; Cell Differentiation/immunology ; Europe/ethnology ; Genetic Predisposition to Disease/*genetics ; Genome, Human/genetics ; Genome-Wide Association Study ; HLA-A Antigens/genetics ; HLA-DR Antigens/genetics ; HLA-DRB1 Chains ; Humans ; Immunity, Cellular/genetics/*immunology ; Major Histocompatibility Complex/genetics ; Multiple Sclerosis/*genetics/*immunology ; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics ; Sample Size ; T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer/cytology/immunology
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  2. 2
    Tallowin, J. R. B. ; Smith, R. E. N. ; Goodyear, J. ; Vickery, J. A.

    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Published 2005
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1365-2494
    Source:
    Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics:
    Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes:
    The contention that agricultural grassland within the UK is spatially and structurally uniform across wide differences in livestock farming intensity is examined. Total nitrogen (N) input was used as a surrogate for management intensity. Farms with average annual N inputs of 〉200 kg ha−1 were categorized as highly intensive, those with N inputs of 50–200 kg N ha−1 as moderately intensive and those with inputs of 〈50 kg N ha−1 were categorized as extensive. Four farms within each management category were selected in two discrete regions: one in south-west England, typifying a landscape dominated by agricultural grassland, the other in south-east England with a more mixed-farming landscape. Specific N input and management data, and sward botanical composition and structure, were obtained on four fields per farm. The south-west region had a higher proportion of farms with dairy cattle than in the south-east England region. The average N input and stocking rates were higher within the intensive-management category farms in south-west England than in south-east England. Old permanent grasslands contained variable amounts of sown species, such as Lolium perenne, and were dominated by a few (generally 〈5) non-sown grass species. Grassland that received 〉75 kg N ha −1 year−1 contained 〈7 plant species and 〈3 forb species m−2. Grassland communities with 〉12 plant species and 〉5 forb species m−2 were only found in study fields that received 〈50 kg N ha−1 year−1. Grasslands with 〉10 forb species m−2 were found only in sites receiving 〈15 kg N ha−1. Of importance at a landscape scale was ubiquity of species-poor and similar grassland plant communities across the management intensity range within and between livestock farms. Grassland in the extensive management category was similar in structure in terms of sward height and/or sward density to more intensively managed grasslands. This study revealed, albeit in two lowland sample regions in the UK, the ubiquity of grass-dominated, species-poor and structurally uniform grasslands, irrespective of apparently broad differences in farming intensity. The consequences of this spatial uniformity on grassland biodiversity are likely to be profound.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  3. 3
    Bastian, Josephine M. ; Vickery, J. R.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1976
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] ON the second day of its first meeting (April 14, 1926), the Executive of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR, later the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, CSIRO) drew up a list of the "urgent and promising" lines of investigation on which it ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  4. 4
    MACFARLANE, J. J. ; SHENSTONE, F. S. ; VICKERY, J. R.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1957
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] The Halphen test is also given by sterculic acid, for which Nunna proposed structure (I) and Verma, Nath and Aggarwal3 proposed structure (II). CH3 (CH2)7 C=C (CH2),COOH (I) \/ CH2 CH3 (CHA CH GH CH=CH (CHZ),COOH CH2 (II) We have examined the infra-red spectra of malvalic, dihydromalvalic, ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  5. 5
    SHENSTONE, F. S. ; VICKERY, J. R.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1956
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] Since the active principle in Malvaceae has not hitherto been identified, chemical studies have been carried out on the oils extracted from the leaves and seeds of Malva verticillata and M. parvifiora and from cotton seed (Gossypium hirsutum). As oils of malvaceous plants are known to give a ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  6. 6
  7. 7
    SHENSTONE, F. S. ; VICKERY, J. R.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1961
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] We have measured the concentrations of malvalic and sterculic acids in the seed and leaf oils of three species from each of the families, Malvaceae and Sterculiaceae. The solvent-extracted oils were saponified under mild conditions, and the total fatty acids were subjected to low-temperature ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  8. 8
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1432-1939
    Keywords:
    Algae ; Brent geese ; Grass pasture ; Saltmarsh ; Switching
    Source:
    Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics:
    Biology
    Notes:
    Abstract Seasonal changes in the distribution and feeding behaviour of dark-bellied brent geese Branta b. bernicla (L.) and the biomass of their food plants were studied in three successive winters on the Norfolk coast. The data was used, in conjunction with published information, to show how depletion, productivity and mortality of food plants drive the pattern of habitat switching in this species. It is then possible to explain the habitat shifts observed over the last 35 years and predict future changes. On arrival, geese fed first on algal beds and then on salt marsh, grass and arable fields before returning to feed entirely on the salt marsh in spring. The biomass of green algae, and subsequently the salt marsh vegetation, declined during the autumn and this could be attributed to depletion through goose grazing and natural mortality. As depletion occurred the geese fed more intensively, for a greater percentage of time and with an increasing pace rate, the net result, however, was a declining intake rate (as measured by defaecation rate). The algal biomass at which the geese switched from the algal beds to salt marsh was consistent between years, with heavy storm-induced loss of algae in one year resulting in an earlier switch. That the timing of habitat switches may be explained by depletion of food plants was further supported by historical data: the number of brent geese wintering at the site has increased dramatically over the last 30–35 years and the time of switching from algal beds to salt marsh and from salt marsh to salt marsh and fields has become progressively earlier, as expected from the increased depletion. The expected further increase in brent goose numbers will increase the rate of depletion of intertidal vegetation so that the switches between habitats will be more rapid and the geese will move inland earlier and remain inland longer. The expected increase in the brent goose population will thus result in a disproportionate increase in the levels of conflict between brent geese and agriculture.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  9. 9
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1741-0444
    Keywords:
    Electrocardiography ; Isopotential surface maps ; Radially-directed electrodes ; Spring-loaded electrodes
    Source:
    Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Notes:
    Abstract A method for the rapid and reproducible recording of 24 chest electrode potentials is described. Rigid electrodes are equally spaced around the thorax in three rows of eight. The electrodes move radially and are spring loaded so as to maintain contact with the skin regardless of the shape of the subject's torso. The inclusion of an impedance convertor in the electrode assembly removes the necessity for using electrode cream. Although equal spacing of the electrodes around the thorax is inefficient in terms of information content per electrode the attention to detail required for electrode placement using the described system is minimised as compared with other multiple lead systems. Furthermore, the principles adopted in the design and construction of the apparatus do not limit the number of chest electrodes to 24.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses