Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:S. Colin)
-
1J. L. Acuna ; A. Lopez-Urrutia ; S. Colin
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2011Staff ViewPublication Date: 2011-09-17Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; Basal Metabolism ; *Biological Evolution ; Body Composition ; Body Weight ; Carbon/analysis ; Crustacea/anatomy & histology/physiology ; *Energy Metabolism ; Fishes/anatomy & histology/physiology ; Models, Biological ; *Predatory Behavior ; Scyphozoa/*anatomy & histology/growth & development/*physiology ; Selection, Genetic ; SwimmingPublished by: -
2C. de Vargas ; S. Audic ; N. Henry ; J. Decelle ; F. Mahe ; R. Logares ; E. Lara ; C. Berney ; N. Le Bescot ; I. Probert ; M. Carmichael ; J. Poulain ; S. Romac ; S. Colin ; J. M. Aury ; L. Bittner ; S. Chaffron ; M. Dunthorn ; S. Engelen ; O. Flegontova ; L. Guidi ; A. Horak ; O. Jaillon ; G. Lima-Mendez ; J. Lukes ; S. Malviya ; R. Morard ; M. Mulot ; E. Scalco ; R. Siano ; F. Vincent ; A. Zingone ; C. Dimier ; M. Picheral ; S. Searson ; S. Kandels-Lewis ; S. G. Acinas ; P. Bork ; C. Bowler ; G. Gorsky ; N. Grimsley ; P. Hingamp ; D. Iudicone ; F. Not ; H. Ogata ; S. Pesant ; J. Raes ; M. E. Sieracki ; S. Speich ; L. Stemmann ; S. Sunagawa ; J. Weissenbach ; P. Wincker ; E. Karsenti
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2015Staff ViewPublication Date: 2015-05-23Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; *Biodiversity ; DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic ; DNA, Ribosomal/genetics ; Eukaryota/*classification/genetics ; Oceans and Seas ; Phylogeny ; Plankton/*classification/genetics ; Ribosomes/genetics ; Sequence Analysis, DNA ; SunlightPublished by: -
3G. Lima-Mendez ; K. Faust ; N. Henry ; J. Decelle ; S. Colin ; F. Carcillo ; S. Chaffron ; J. C. Ignacio-Espinosa ; S. Roux ; F. Vincent ; L. Bittner ; Y. Darzi ; J. Wang ; S. Audic ; L. Berline ; G. Bontempi ; A. M. Cabello ; L. Coppola ; F. M. Cornejo-Castillo ; F. d'Ovidio ; L. De Meester ; I. Ferrera ; M. J. Garet-Delmas ; L. Guidi ; E. Lara ; S. Pesant ; M. Royo-Llonch ; G. Salazar ; P. Sanchez ; M. Sebastian ; C. Souffreau ; C. Dimier ; M. Picheral ; S. Searson ; S. Kandels-Lewis ; G. Gorsky ; F. Not ; H. Ogata ; S. Speich ; L. Stemmann ; J. Weissenbach ; P. Wincker ; S. G. Acinas ; S. Sunagawa ; P. Bork ; M. B. Sullivan ; E. Karsenti ; C. Bowler ; C. de Vargas ; J. Raes
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2015Staff ViewPublication Date: 2015-05-23Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; *Food Chain ; Host Specificity ; Oceans and Seas ; Phylogeny ; Plankton/*classification/*physiology ; Platyhelminths/classification/physiology ; Sunlight ; *Symbiosis ; Viruses/classificationPublished by: -
4Staff View
Type of Medium: bookPublication Date: 2022Keywords: Evaluation ; Sozialer Faktor ; Ranking ; Hochschulbildung ; Hochschule ; USALanguage: English -
5James W. Clancy, Colin S. Sheehan, Christopher J. Tricarico, Crislyn D'Souza-Schorey
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB)
Published 2018Staff ViewPublication Date: 2018-08-04Publisher: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB)Print ISSN: 0021-9258Electronic ISSN: 1083-351XTopics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyPublished by: -
6Sarsam, Mazin A.I. ; Campbell, Colin S. ; Yonan, Nizar A. ; Deiraniya, Abdul K. ; Rahman, Ali N.
Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Published 1993Staff ViewISSN: 1540-8191Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: MedicineNotes: Abstract Forty patients underwent orthotopic cardiac transplantation at Wythenshawe Hospital between May 1991 and November 1992. Twenty patients had transplantation using an alternative technique that preserves the shape of the left atrium and leaves the right atrium intact (group A). The remaining twenty had conventional transplantation using the technique described by Lower and Shumway (group B). The patients were randomized to either the new or the conventional technique on an alternate basis. There was no mortality in group A, but two patients in group B developed right ventricular failure and died. Two patients in each group developed nodal rhythm and all four recovered sinus rhythm. Echocardiography and Doppler velocimetry at the transvalvular level confirmed normal atrial function in group A with erratic atrial contraction wave in group B. There was also slightly lower incidence of mitral and tricuspid valve regurgitation in group A than in group B. The improved atrial function in group A may play a part in the prevention of right sided failure following cardiac transplantation.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
7Staff View
ISSN: 1475-6765Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: Political ScienceNotes: A rapid increase in the non-manual proportion of the labour force has characterised most Western nations over the past 50 years. This development appears to have had an especial impact on the socio-economic composition and work, market and status position of the group of white-collar workers on the lower fringes of the non-manual stratum, and many theorists have expected that it would have implications too for their political behaviour and social attitudes. There have been a variety of prognostications, but very little supportive evidence of reactions at the individual level. Our empirical analysis of white-collar workers in Britain and the Netherlands suggests, however, that they have not responded to change in the expected, rather dramatic way, but that the aggregate pattern of their partisanship and political attitudes remains “intermediate” between those of the solid middle and working-class groups. Further examination shows that such a finding should not be surprising, for white-collar workers have not been universally subject to similar experiences nor would they be likely to interpret them in exactly similar ways. Rather they constitute a group whose diverse political and social backgrounds continue importantly to influence their behaviour and outlook and to militate against any strong, “class-based” reaction to socio-economic change.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
8Staff View
ISSN: 1467-9248Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: Political ScienceType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
9Staff View
ISSN: 1467-9248Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: Political ScienceType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
10Staff View
ISSN: 1365-2427Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: BiologyNotes: 1. The case is advanced that freshwater ecologists need to champion the relevance of their work to the development of ecological theory and to the understanding of ecosystem function and behaviour, not least for its importance in addressing pressing applications to the stewardship of the biosphere. An essential step is to review, and update where necessary, the paradigms of aquatic ecology.2. It is proposed that the major constraint on the organisms, their attributes and adaptations are related first to the physical properties of the medium in which they live. The drives to grow and reproduce relate to the trophic transfer of reduced carbon with important microbial interventions. General principles of ‘emergy’ apply. The supportive capacities of given environments may be set by chemical constraints, but it is suggested that, with the exception of chronically resource-deficient waters, population dynamics relate to opportunities incumbent upon system variability and the consequent pulsation of resources.3. Variability affects diversity, through frequent revision of the thermodynamic base. Frequent structural change promotes species diversity and, because function is maintained, it appears that efficient function is dependent upon high diversity. Caution is necessary because high productivity and high diversity are both products of the disturbances consequent upon external forcing and manifestly non-equilibrium conditions.4. Reactions to these statements are canvassed.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
11Staff View
ISSN: 1600-0536Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: MedicineType of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
12POLLOCK, Carol A ; IBELS, Lloyd S ; ONG, Colin S ; CATERSON, Robyn J ; WAUGH, David A ; MAHONY, John F
Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Published 1995Staff ViewISSN: 1440-1797Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary: Serum lipids and lipoprotein (a) concentrations were measured in 91 renal transplant and 60 dialysis patients and correlations sought with clinically evident vascular disease. Serum lipoprotein (a) concentrations were greater than 300 mg/L in 24% of the renal transplant recipients and 40% of the dialysis patients. In the renal transplant recipients, low high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (P〈0.05) and high total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol ratio (P〈0.01) were more strongly associated with the presence of vascular disease than was elevated lipoprotein (a). In the dialysis patients, a low serum albumin (P〈0.05) and low serum creatinine (P〈0.001), indicative of a poor nutritional state, were associated with the presence of vascular disease. A high total serum cholesterol to HDL cholesterol ratio (P〈0.05) was indicative of ischaemic heart disease, and high total serum cholesterol (P〈0.01) and low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (P〈0.01) of cerebrovascular disease. In the subpopulation on CAPD, elevated lipoprotein (a) levels were associated with cerebrovascular disease (P〈0.01). the present study demonstrates that an elevation in serum lipoprotein (a) concentration is not as strongly associated with the presence of vascular disease in patients with end-stage renal failure as are the total serum cholesterol, HDL and LDL cholesterol and the ratio of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
13Ong, Colin S ; Cook, Natasha ; Lee, Stephen
Melbourne, Australia : Blackwell Science Pty
Published 2000Staff ViewISSN: 1440-0960Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: MedicineNotes: A 105-year-old woman developed pemphigus foliaceus. She had been on fosinopril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE inhibitor) for 4 years. Anti-intercellular cement substance antibodies were positive with titre 〉 160. She died during admission of an unrelated illness. A 57-year-old man developed pemphigus vulgaris after 11 months treatment with quinapril. At 14 months after developing pemphigus, this man continues on prednisone and azathioprine. We speculate that these are cases of ACE-inhibitor-related pemphigus and we review ACE-inhibitor-related pemphigus.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
14Lewis, David M. ; Elliott, J. Alex ; Brookes, Justin D. ; Irish, Anthony E. ; Lambert, Martin F. ; Reynolds, Colin S.
Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science, Ltd
Published 2003Staff ViewISSN: 1440-1770Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: GeographyNotes: An artificially destratified reservoir was simulated with the freshwater phytoplankton model PROTECH (Phytoplankton Responses To Environmental Change). The chosen site for validation was a highly managed drinking water supply reservoir (Myponga Reservoir, South Australia). Chemical dosing using copper sulphate (CuSO4) and artificial mixing via an aerator and two raft-mounted mechanical surface mixers (hereafter referred to as surface mixers) are used at Myponga to manage water quality, in particular the threat of cyanobacteria growth. The phytoplankton community was adequately modelled and showed that the community was dominated by species tolerant of low light doses (R-type strategists). The light limitation in the water body was found to be the controlling factor on phytoplankton succession. Subsequently, small fast-growing species and larger motile phytoplankton (C and CS-type, respectively) do not have the opportunity to dominate under all simulated conditions, diminishing the need for CuSO4 dosing. These simulations demonstrated that the individual and combined impact of the management strategies reduces the total algal biomass, but have minimal effect upon phytoplankton functional-type succession, and R-type species continued to dominate under all simulated scenarios. It was concluded that, due to the light-limitation and current nutrient availability in Myponga Reservoir, the probability of persistent populations of undesirable scum-forming cyanobacteria is minimal, even in the absence of artificial control.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
15Staff View
ISSN: 1440-0960Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005Topics: MedicineNotes: Dermatologists use gloves as a major tool in universal precautions to prevent transmission of infections particularly human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis. We need to know how much protection is conferred by gloves and what problems are associated with glove use. This paper looks at these issues and reports the results of a survey on glove use by Australian dermatologists. The survey found a lack of awareness regarding gloves as a protective measure, suggesting the need to improve knowledge in this area so that realistic precautions can be adopted. Dermatologists have a high rate of glove use and reactions to gloves were noted by 13% of respondents. The authors recommend the use of non-powdered, low-allergen latex gloves. Handwashing prior to using non-powdered latex gloves needs further investigation. Handwashing after wearing latex gloves may decrease sensitization risk.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
16Staff View
ISSN: 0093-3139Topics: Linguistics and Literary StudiesURL: -
17Staff View
ISSN: 0093-3139Topics: Linguistics and Literary StudiesNotes: FIRST-DECADE ISSUEURL: -
18CONQUEST, ROBERT ; GIBERT, STEPHEN P. ; GRAY, COLIN S. ; HARRIGAN, ANTHONY ; MICHAEL, FRANZ ; TIERNEY, JOHN J. 〈JR〉
Washington D.C., Wash. : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
Published 1977Staff ViewISSN: 0146-5945Topics: Political ScienceURL: -
19Staff View
ISSN: 0146-5945Topics: Political ScienceURL: -
20Staff View
ISSN: 0146-5945Topics: Political ScienceURL: