Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:T. Woods)

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  1. 1
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2018-02-03
    Publisher:
    American Society of Hematology (ASH)
    Print ISSN:
    0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN:
    1528-0020
    Topics:
    Biology
    Medicine
    Keywords:
    Pediatric Hematology, Myeloid Neoplasia, Lymphoid Neoplasia, Clinical Trials and Observations
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  2. 2
    B. M. Jakosky ; J. M. Grebowsky ; J. G. Luhmann ; J. Connerney ; F. Eparvier ; R. Ergun ; J. Halekas ; D. Larson ; P. Mahaffy ; J. McFadden ; D. F. Mitchell ; N. Schneider ; R. Zurek ; S. Bougher ; D. Brain ; Y. J. Ma ; C. Mazelle ; L. Andersson ; D. Andrews ; D. Baird ; D. Baker ; J. M. Bell ; M. Benna ; M. Chaffin ; P. Chamberlin ; Y. Y. Chaufray ; J. Clarke ; G. Collinson ; M. Combi ; F. Crary ; T. Cravens ; M. Crismani ; S. Curry ; D. Curtis ; J. Deighan ; G. Delory ; R. Dewey ; G. DiBraccio ; C. Dong ; Y. Dong ; P. Dunn ; M. Elrod ; S. England ; A. Eriksson ; J. Espley ; S. Evans ; X. Fang ; M. Fillingim ; K. Fortier ; C. M. Fowler ; J. Fox ; H. Groller ; S. Guzewich ; T. Hara ; Y. Harada ; G. Holsclaw ; S. K. Jain ; R. Jolitz ; F. Leblanc ; C. O. Lee ; Y. Lee ; F. Lefevre ; R. Lillis ; R. Livi ; D. Lo ; M. Mayyasi ; W. McClintock ; T. McEnulty ; R. Modolo ; F. Montmessin ; M. Morooka ; A. Nagy ; K. Olsen ; W. Peterson ; A. Rahmati ; S. Ruhunusiri ; C. T. Russell ; S. Sakai ; J. A. Sauvaud ; K. Seki ; M. Steckiewicz ; M. Stevens ; A. I. Stewart ; A. Stiepen ; S. Stone ; V. Tenishev ; E. Thiemann ; R. Tolson ; D. Toublanc ; M. Vogt ; T. Weber ; P. Withers ; T. Woods ; R. Yelle
    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    Published 2015
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2015-11-07
    Publisher:
    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    Print ISSN:
    0036-8075
    Electronic ISSN:
    1095-9203
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Computer Science
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  3. 3
    S. Bougher ; B. Jakosky ; J. Halekas ; J. Grebowsky ; J. Luhmann ; P. Mahaffy ; J. Connerney ; F. Eparvier ; R. Ergun ; D. Larson ; J. McFadden ; D. Mitchell ; N. Schneider ; R. Zurek ; C. Mazelle ; L. Andersson ; D. Andrews ; D. Baird ; D. N. Baker ; J. M. Bell ; M. Benna ; D. Brain ; M. Chaffin ; P. Chamberlin ; J. Y. Chaufray ; J. Clarke ; G. Collinson ; M. Combi ; F. Crary ; T. Cravens ; M. Crismani ; S. Curry ; D. Curtis ; J. Deighan ; G. Delory ; R. Dewey ; G. DiBraccio ; C. Dong ; Y. Dong ; P. Dunn ; M. Elrod ; S. England ; A. Eriksson ; J. Espley ; S. Evans ; X. Fang ; M. Fillingim ; K. Fortier ; C. M. Fowler ; J. Fox ; H. Groller ; S. Guzewich ; T. Hara ; Y. Harada ; G. Holsclaw ; S. K. Jain ; R. Jolitz ; F. Leblanc ; C. O. Lee ; Y. Lee ; F. Lefevre ; R. Lillis ; R. Livi ; D. Lo ; Y. Ma ; M. Mayyasi ; W. McClintock ; T. McEnulty ; R. Modolo ; F. Montmessin ; M. Morooka ; A. Nagy ; K. Olsen ; W. Peterson ; A. Rahmati ; S. Ruhunusiri ; C. T. Russell ; S. Sakai ; J. A. Sauvaud ; K. Seki ; M. Steckiewicz ; M. Stevens ; A. I. Stewart ; A. Stiepen ; S. Stone ; V. Tenishev ; E. Thiemann ; R. Tolson ; D. Toublanc ; M. Vogt ; T. Weber ; P. Withers ; T. Woods ; R. Yelle
    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    Published 2015
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2015-11-07
    Publisher:
    American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    Print ISSN:
    0036-8075
    Electronic ISSN:
    1095-9203
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Computer Science
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  4. 4
    Staff View
    Publication Date:
    2018-01-09
    Publisher:
    The American Association of Immunologists (AAI)
    Print ISSN:
    0022-1767
    Electronic ISSN:
    1550-6606
    Topics:
    Medicine
    Published by:
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  5. 5
  6. 6
    Latest Papers from Table of Contents or Articles in Press
  7. 7
    Jennings, I. ; Kitchen, S. ; Woods, T. A. L. ; Preston, F. E.

    Oxford UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Published 1998
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1365-2516
    Source:
    Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics:
    Medicine
    Notes:
    A World Federation of Hemophilia External Quality Assessment Scheme has been established to promote high standards of laboratory performance in haemophilia centres worldwide. Results from 21 International Haemophilia Training Centres (IHTCs) provide target values for the prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), factor VIII:C, IX:C and von Willebrand factor (VWF) assays, against which the performance of Haemophilia Centres in developing countries (HCs) can be assessed.Eight surveys were distributed over a 3-year period between 1994 and 1997. A higher proportion of HCs failed to identify an abnormal PT or APTT in samples from donors with mild deficiencies of the extrinsic and intrinsic systems, respectively. For factor VIII:C and IX:C assays, agreement between HC results was consistently poorer than between IHTCs. However, improvement in between-centre agreement could be seen for two samples distributed on more than one occasion. A minority of HCs perform assays for VWF, and a questionnaire revealed equipment and reagent costs as limiting the range of assays which could be carried out in several centres. However, agreement was in some cases better between those HCs that did perform VWF assays than between IHTCs. The problems of screening test sensitivity and between-centre agreement for factor assays need to be addressed, together with the limitations which prevent HCs from performing a full range of tests in the diagnosis and treatment of bleeding disorders.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  8. 8
    JENNINGS, I. ; KITCHEN, S. ; WOODS, T. A. L. ; PRESTON, F. E.

    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Published 1996
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1365-2516
    Source:
    Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics:
    Medicine
    Notes:
    Summary. A World Federation of Hemophilia External Quality Assessment Scheme has been established to promote high standards of laboratory performance in haemophilia centres worldwide. Twenty-two International Haemophilia Training Centres (IHTCs) participated in a pilot study designed to assess between-laboratory agreement and to establish target values for the prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, factor VIII:C, IX:C and von Willebrand factor assays. Although variations in results and clinical interpretations were observed between the centres, median results and assay precision were comparable to that seen in the United Kingdom National External Quality Assessment Scheme. IHTC-generated median results were therefore considered appropriate target values against which to compare the performance of haemophilia centres in developing countries.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  9. 9
    TENISON-WOODS, T. E.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1882
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] I BEG to call the attention of geologists to the following facts:—On the north-east coast of Australia, at the end of Trinity Bay, about lat. 17° S., there are steep ranges of granite abutting on the sea-margin. Every rainy season (December, January, and February) immense quantities of the ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  10. 10
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    0042-207X
    Source:
    Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
    Topics:
    Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Physics
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  11. 11
    Feldman, P. D. ; A'Hearn, M. F. ; Festou, M. C. ; McFadden, L. A. ; Weaver, H. A. ; Woods, T. N.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1986
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] Data were obtained during a combined 16 h US1-US2 IUE shift on 18 March 1986 beginning at 11:00 UT. Observations consisted of a large number of relatively short exposures taken at various offset distances from the nucleus with the long-wavelength (LWP) spectrograph to map the spatial distribution ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  12. 12
    Woods, T. N. ; Feldman, P. D. ; Dymond, K. F. ; Sahnow, D. J.

    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Published 1986
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1476-4687
    Source:
    Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics:
    Biology
    Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Medicine
    Natural Sciences in General
    Physics
    Notes:
    [Auszug] Atomic carbon is a common feature in the ultraviolet spectrum of many comets, yet its origin remains unclear.. In comet West (1976 VI), the observed C I emission was consistent with a model of carbon as a daugher of CO which is vaporized from the nucleus as a parent molecule3. However, for comet ...
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  13. 13
    Urry, D. W. ; Peng, S. Q. ; Hayes, L. C. ; McPherson, D. ; Xu, J. ; Woods, T. C. ; Gowda, D. C. ; Pattanaik, A.

    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Published 1998
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    0006-3592
    Keywords:
    protein-based polymers ; inverse temperature transitions ; hydrophobic-induced pKa shifts ; waters of hydrophobic hydration ; five axioms for protein engineering; microwave dielectric relaxation ; a universal mechanism for biological energy conversion ; Chemistry ; Biochemistry and Biotechnology
    Source:
    Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics:
    Biology
    Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes:
    Metabolism is the conversion of available energy sources to those energy forms required for sustaining and propagating living organisms; this is simply biological energy conversion. Proteins are the machines of metabolism; they are the engines of motility and the other machines that interconvert energy forms not involving motion. Accordingly, metabolic engineering becomes the use of natural protein-based machines for the good of society. In addition, metabolic engineering can utilize the principles, whereby proteins function, to design new protein-based machines to fulfill roles for society that proteins have never been called upon throughout evolution to fulfill.This article presents arguments for a universal mechanism whereby proteins perform their diverse energy conversions; it begins with background information, and then asserts a set of five axioms for protein folding, assembly, and function and for protein engineering. The key process is the hydrophobic folding and assembly transition exhibited by properly balanced amphiphilic protein sequences. The fundamental molecular process is the competition for hydration between hydrophobic and polar, e.g., charged, residues. This competition determines Tt, the onset temperature for the hydrophobic folding and assembly transition, Nhh, the numbers of waters of hydrophobic hydration, and the pKa of ionizable functions.Reported acid-base titrations and pH dependence of microwave dielectric relaxation data simultaneously demonstrate the interdependence of Tt, Nhh and the pKa using a series of microbially prepared protein-based poly(30mers) with one glutamic acid residue per 30mer and with an increasing number of more hydrophobic phenylalanine residues replacing valine residues. Also, reduction of nicotinamides and flavins is shown to lower Tt, i.e., to increase hydrophobicity.Furthermore, the argument is presented, and related to an extended Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, wherein reduction of nicotinamides represents an increase in hydrophobicity and resulting hydrophobic-induced pKa shifts become the basis for understanding a primary energy conversion (proton transport) process of mitochondria. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biotechnol Bioeng 58:175-190, 1998.
    Additional Material:
    11 Ill.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  14. 14
    Woods, T. O. ; Berghaus, D. G.
    Springer
    Published 1994
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1741-2765
    Source:
    Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics:
    Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes:
    Abstract Nuclear fuel can be fabricated using powder-metallurgy processes by compacting uranium-oxide powder with aluminum powder to form a cermet and then extruding the cermet to form fuel tubes. This method of production allows greater control of uranium-oxide particle size and distribution in the tube, making the production of fuel with greater concentrations of uranium oxide possible, and thus decreasing the volume of radioactive waste remaining after the fuel is spent. As the concentration of uranium oxide increases, however, there is an increase in failures during extrusion. To address this problem, an experimental procedure was developed to examine the response of powder aluminum, a material with a structure similar to that of the cermet fuel, to biaxial loadings such as those experienced during extrusion. Biaxial loadings can be varied from pure shear to simple tension or compression, or to combinations of these loadings in a numerically controlled ‘tension-torsion’ testing machine. Data obtained using this system were used to develop a model for the post-yield behavior in extruded powder aluminum which includes information derived both from the macroscopic stress-strain behavior of 1100 aluminum and extruded powder aluminum and from the observed microscopic structure of the extruded powder aluminum. This paper describes the development of the experimental system and shows the different biaxial mechanical behavior of the two materials. Test fixtures were developed and software was written to control constant strain-rate tension, compression, torsion, combined tension-torsion, and combined compression-torsion tests performed using a computer-controlled MTS biaxial testing machine. Extruded powder aluminum and 1100 aluminum specimens were tested at 427°C, the powder-aluminum extrusion temperature, under those loading conditions. Each specimen was subjected to only one loading cycle. Data were recorded during loading only. Tested specimens were also sectioned and examined microscopically.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses
  15. 15
    Woods, T. O. ; Berghaus, D. G. ; Peacock, H. B.
    Springer
    Published 1998
    Staff View
    ISSN:
    1741-2765
    Source:
    Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics:
    Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes:
    Abstract This paper proposes a model and a mechanism for explaining the mechanical behavior of extruded powder aluminum at elevated temperature. This behavior is significantly different from that of ingot-cast and drawn aluminum which is subjected to the same tests. Powder aluminum exhibits a strain-softening effect which is evident in a decrease of stress with increasing strain in uniaxial test specimens when the experiment proceeds into the postyield region. Similar behavior is observed in the shear response during biaxial tension-torsion loading. For these tests, the shear stress is additionally reduced with increased axial extension. A model and mechanism are proposed, based on the relative motion of the extruded aluminum particles, to explain this effect. Equations are derived which relate the axial and shear stresses and strains. These equations are fitted to data obtained in a matrix of experiments, which include combined loadings from uniaxial tension to simple shear. Results are presented graphically and are in good agreement with the proposed models.
    Type of Medium:
    Electronic Resource
    URL:
    Articles: DFG German National Licenses