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1

Hunt, David. "Roger Cook, founding co-editor of Nematology." Nematology 5, no. 6 (2003): 791. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156854103773040691.

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2

Montgomery, Paul J., and Steven L. Garrett. "Low‐cost thermoacoustic co‐generator for biomass‐burning cook stoves." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 128, no. 4 (October 2010): 2347. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.3508313.

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3

Asher, Roberta C., Tammie Jakstas, Julia A. Wolfson, Anna J. Rose, Tamara Bucher, Fiona Lavelle, Moira Dean, et al. "Cook-EdTM: A Model for Planning, Implementing and Evaluating Cooking Programs to Improve Diet and Health." Nutrients 12, no. 7 (July 6, 2020): 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12072011.

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Domestic cooking education programs are typically designed to improve an individual’s food and cooking skills, although not necessarily diet quality. Currently, there are no comprehensive models to guide the planning, implementation and evaluation of domestic cooking education programs that focus on improving diet and health. Our aim was to address this through development of the Cooking Education (“Cook-EdTM”) model, using the PRECEDE-PROCEED model as the underlying Cook-EdTM framework. A review of the food and cooking skills education literature informed the content of the Cook-EdTM model. Cook-EdTM was critiqued by experts in consumer behaviour, cooking and nutrition education research and education until consensus on model content and format was reached. Cook-EdTM leads cooking program developers through eight distinct stages, engaging key stakeholders in a co-design process from the outset to tailor programs to address the need of individuals and inform the development of program content, program delivery, and evaluation. A Cook-EdTM scenario applied in practice is described. The proposed Cook-EdTM model has potential to be adapted for use in domestic cooking education programs delivered in clinical, community, school or research settings. Further research will establish Cook-EdTM’s utility in enhancing program development and in improving food and cooking skills, dietary patterns and health outcomes.
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Dang, Jin, Chaoliu Li, Jihua Li, Andy Dang, Qianggong Zhang, Pengfei Chen, Shichang Kang, and Derek Dunn-Rankin. "Emissions from Solid Fuel Cook Stoves in the HimalayaRegion." Energies 12, no. 6 (March 21, 2019): 1089. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en12061089.

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Solid fuel cooking stoves have been used as primary energy sources for residential cooking and heating activities throughout human history. It has been estimated that domestic combustion of solid fuels makes a considerable contribution to global greenhouse gas (GHG) and pollutant emissions. The majority of data collected from simulated tests in laboratories does not accurately reflect the performance of stoves in actual use. This study characterizes in-field emissions of fine particulate matter (PM2.5), carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO), methane (CH4), and total non-methane hydrocarbons (TNMHC) from residential cooking events with various fuel and stove types from villages in two provinces in China (Tibet and Yunnan) in the Himalayan area. Emissions of PM2.5 and gas-phase pollutant concentrations were measured directly and corresponding emission factors calculated using the carbon balance approach. Real-time monitoring of indoor PM2.5, CO2, and CO concentrations was conducted simultaneously. Major factors responsible for emission variance among and between cooking stoves are discussed.
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5

Fleming, Lauren T., Robert Weltman, Ankit Yadav, Rufus D. Edwards, Narendra K. Arora, Ajay Pillarisetti, Simone Meinardi, Kirk R. Smith, Donald R. Blake, and Sergey A. Nizkorodov. "Emissions from village cookstoves in Haryana, India, and their potential impacts on air quality." Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 18, no. 20 (October 22, 2018): 15169–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-15169-2018.

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Abstract. Air quality in rural India is impacted by residential cooking and heating with biomass fuels. In this study, emissions of CO, CO2, and 76 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) were quantified to better understand the relationship between cook fire emissions and ambient ozone and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. Cooking was carried out by a local cook, and traditional dishes were prepared on locally built chulha or angithi cookstoves using brushwood or dung fuels. Cook fire emissions were collected throughout the cooking event in a Kynar bag (VOCs) and on polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) filters (PM2.5). Gas samples were transferred from a Kynar bag to previously evacuated stainless-steel canisters and analyzed using gas chromatography coupled to flame ionization, electron capture, and mass spectrometry detectors. VOC emission factors were calculated from the measured mixing ratios using the carbon-balance method, which assumes that all carbon in the fuel is converted to CO2, CO, VOCs, and PM2.5 when the fuel is burned. Filter samples were weighed to calculate PM2.5 emission factors. Dung fuels and angithi cookstoves resulted in significantly higher emissions of most VOCs (p<0.05). Utilizing dung–angithi cook fires resulted in twice as much of the measured VOCs compared to dung–chulha and 4 times as much as brushwood–chulha, with 84.0, 43.2, and 17.2 g measured VOC kg−1 fuel carbon, respectively. This matches expectations, as the use of dung fuels and angithi cookstoves results in lower modified combustion efficiencies compared to brushwood fuels and chulha cookstoves. Alkynes and benzene were exceptions and had significantly higher emissions when cooking using a chulha as opposed to an angithi with dung fuel (for example, benzene emission factors were 3.18 g kg−1 fuel carbon for dung–chulha and 2.38 g kg−1 fuel carbon for dung–angithi). This study estimated that 3 times as much SOA and ozone in the maximum incremental reactivity (MIR) regime may be produced from dung–chulha as opposed to brushwood–chulha cook fires. Aromatic compounds dominated as SOA precursors from all types of cook fires, but benzene was responsible for the majority of SOA formation potential from all chulha cook fire VOCs, while substituted aromatics were more important for dung–angithi. Future studies should investigate benzene exposures from different stove and fuel combinations and model SOA formation from cook fire VOCs to verify public health and air quality impacts from cook fires.
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6

Tu’akoi, Siobhan, Neti Tamarua-Herman, Karen Tairea, Mark H. Vickers, Yin Yin May Aung, and Jacquie L. Bay. "Supporting Cook Island communities to access DOHaD evidence." Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease 11, no. 6 (July 7, 2020): 564–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2040174420000252.

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AbstractDevelopmental origins of health and disease research have cemented relationships between the early-life environment and later risk of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). However, there is limited translation of this knowledge in developing-economy nations, such as the Cook Islands, that carry exceptionally high NCD burdens. Considering the evidence, Cook Islands leaders identified a need for increased community awareness of the importance of early-life nutrition. Using a community-based participatory research approach, this study aimed to engage Cook Islands community representatives in the co-construction of a contextually relevant early-life nutrition resource. A booklet distributed to mothers in Australia and New Zealand was used as a starting point. Ten semi-structured focus groups (n = 60) explored views regarding the existing resource and options for contextual adaptation. Three core themes were identified: knowledge of the importance of early-life nutrition, recognition of the need for an early-life nutrition resource and the importance of resources being context specific. A draft booklet was created based on these discussions. Participants were invited to give feedback via a second round of focus groups. This confirmed that the voice of the community was represented in the draft booklet. Suggestions for additional material not included in the original resource were also identified. We report on the process and outcomes of the co-construction with community representatives of a resource that has the potential to be used to stimulate community-level discussion about the importance of early-life nutrition. It is crucial that communities have an active voice in research and in making decisions about interventions for their population.
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7

Loughner, William. "Concerning paper by Kevin Cook." Journal of the American Society for Information Science 42, no. 2 (March 1991): 113. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-4571(199103)42:2<113::aid-asi6>3.0.co;2-g.

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8

Gray, David. "An application of two non-parametric techniques to the prices of British dwellings: An examination of cyclicality." Urban Studies 55, no. 10 (June 13, 2017): 2286–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098017710381.

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Using a Pesaran-Timmermann test of co-movement, Cook and Watson (Cook S and Watson D, 2015, A new perspective on the ripple effect in the UK housing market: Co-movement, cyclical subsamples and alternative indices. Urban Studies 53(14): 3048–3062) suggest they have highlighted the ‘ripple’ effect. Using reference series of the UK, London, Scotland and three deterministic-periodic series, regional prices are shown to have similar cyclical characteristics, with delays based on distance from London. With periodicities consistent with those revealed by spectral analysis, the deterministic-periodic series reference provides a means of establishing cyclical characteristics whilst avoiding issues concerning variable amplitudes. Although a ripple is revealed, using London as a reference poses problems empirically: its cycle is likely to be atypical as well as asynchronised.
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9

Reid, S. "Pressure Gradients and Winds in Cook Strait." Weather and Forecasting 11, no. 4 (December 1996): 476–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/1520-0434(1996)011<0476:pgawic>2.0.co;2.

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10

Gerken, Sarah. "Two new cumaceans (Crustacea: Peracarida) from Cook Inlet, Alaska." Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 118, no. 4 (December 2005): 674–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2988/0006-324x(2005)118[674:tnccpf]2.0.co;2.

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11

de Scally, Fes A. "Historical Tropical Cyclone Activity and Impacts in the Cook Islands1." Pacific Science 62, no. 4 (October 2008): 443–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2984/1534-6188(2008)62[443:htcaai]2.0.co;2.

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12

Kyriakidis, Nikolaos B., Apostolos Apostolidis, Lambros E. Papazoglou, and Vaios T. Karathanos. "Physicochemical Studies of Hard-to-Cook Beans (Phaseolus vulgaris)." Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 74, no. 2 (June 1997): 186–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0010(199706)74:2<186::aid-jsfa785>3.0.co;2-x.

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13

Vos, Daniel J., and Kim E. W. Shelden. "UNUSUAL MORTALITY IN THE DEPLETED COOK INLET BELUGA (DELPHINAPTERUS LEUCAS) POPULATION." Northwestern Naturalist 86, no. 2 (September 2005): 59–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1898/1051-1733(2005)086[0059:umitdc]2.0.co;2.

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14

Macklin, S. Allen, Nicholas A. Bond, and Jeffrey P. Walker. "Structure of a Low-Level Jet over Lower Cook Inlet, Alaska." Monthly Weather Review 118, no. 12 (December 1990): 2568–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(1990)118<2568:soallj>2.0.co;2.

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15

SHEAR, WILLIAM A., and WILLIAM P. LEONARD. "Additions to the milliped family Caseyidae. I. Caseya richarti, n. sp., and new records of previously described species in the genus Caseya Cook and Collins 1895 (Diplopoda, Chordeumatida, Caseyidae)." Zootaxa 1524, no. 1 (July 9, 2007): 23–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1524.1.2.

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Caseya richarti, n. sp., from King Co., Washington, USA, is described from two nearby localities in King County, Washington (state), USA. The genus Caseya Cook and Collins 1895, which now includes 25 species and subspecies, occurs from Los Angeles Co, California, USA, north through the Sierra Nevada and Coast Ranges nearly to the Canadian border. New records are given expanding the range of C. borealis Gardner and Shelley 1989 in Washington, and further new records are provided for Caseya megasoma Gardner and Shelley 1989, C. dorada (Chamberlin 1941), C. heteropa disjuncta Gardner and Shelley 1989, C. heteropa oraria Gardner and Shelley 1989, and C. heteropa montana Gardner and Shelley 1989. Additional notes are provided on gonopod nomenclature and the status of subspecies in Caseya.
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16

Sangwan, Kuldip Singh, Girish Kant, Aditya Deshpande, and Pankaj Sharma. "Modeling of Stresses and Temperature in Turning Using Finite Element Method." Applied Mechanics and Materials 307 (February 2013): 174–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.307.174.

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This paper focuses on finite element modeling of orthogonal cutting process of AISI 1045 steel using Modified Johnson Cook (MJC) as constitutive material flow model under various machining parameters. Finite element solutions of cutting forces, effective stresses and temperature are obtained for a wide range of cutting speeds and feeds. The effect of feed and cutting speed on cutting forces, effective stresses and temperature has been studied over a wide range of values. Percentage variation of each is also studied to predict co-relation with the different machining parameters.
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17

Crawford, Terry J., and Bruce J. Crawford. "Linckia multifora (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) in Rarotonga, Cook Islands: Reproductive Mechanisms and Ecophenotypes." Pacific Science 61, no. 3 (July 2007): 371–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2984/1534-6188(2007)61[371:lmeair]2.0.co;2.

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18

Davis, Faith G., Victoria W. Persky, Cynthia D. Ferre, Holly L. Howe, Richard E. Barrett, and William M. Haenszel. "Cancer incidence of hispanics and non-hispanic whites in Cook County, Illinois." Cancer 75, no. 12 (June 15, 1995): 2939–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(19950615)75:12<2939::aid-cncr2820751222>3.0.co;2-1.

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19

Vanzin, Gary, Jianping Yu, Sharon Smolinski, Vekalet Tek, Grant Pennington, and Pin-Ching Maness. "Characterization of Genes Responsible for the CO-Linked Hydrogen Production Pathway in Rubrivivax gelatinosus." Applied and Environmental Microbiology 76, no. 11 (April 16, 2010): 3715–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aem.02753-09.

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ABSTRACT Upon exposure to carbon monoxide, the purple nonsulfur photosynthetic bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus produces hydrogen concomitantly with the oxidation of CO according to the equation CO + H2O ↔ CO2 + H2. Yet little is known about the genetic elements encoding this reaction in this organism. In the present study, we use transposon mutagenesis and functional complementation to uncover three clustered genes, cooL, cooX, and cooH, in Rubrivivax gelatinosus putatively encoding part of a membrane-bound, multisubunit NiFe-hydrogenase. We present the complete amino acid sequences for the large catalytic subunit and its electron-relaying small subunit, encoded by cooH and cooL, respectively. Sequence alignment reveals a conserved region in the large subunit coordinating a binuclear [NiFe] center and a conserved region in the small subunit coordinating a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Protein purification experiments show that a protein fraction of 58 kDa molecular mass could function in H2 evolution mediated by reduced methyl viologen. Western blotting experiments show that the two hydrogenase subunits are detectable and accumulate only when cells are exposed to CO. The cooX gene encodes a putative Fe-S protein mediating electron transfer to the hydrogenase small subunit. We conclude that these three Rubrivivax proteins encompass part of a membrane-bound, multisubunit NiFe-hydrogenase belonging to the energy-converting hydrogenase (Ech) type, which has been found among diverse microbes with a common feature in coupling H2 production with proton pumping for energy generation.
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20

Bursey, Charles R., and Stephen R. Goldberg. "HEDRURIS HANLEYAEN. SP. (NEMATODA: HEDRURIDAE) FROMHEMIDACTYLUS GARNOTII(SAURIA: GEKKONIDAE) FROM THE COOK ISLANDS, OCEANIA." Journal of Parasitology 86, no. 3 (June 2000): 556–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1645/0022-3395(2000)086[0556:hhnsnh]2.0.co;2.

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21

Bruhn, R. L., W. T. Parry, and M. P. Bunds. "Tectonics, fluid migration, and fluid pressure in a deformed forearc basin, Cook Inlet, Alaska." Geological Society of America Bulletin 112, no. 4 (April 1, 2000): 550–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(2000)112<550:tfmafp>2.0.co;2.

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22

Fajriah, Fajriah, Junaidin Junaidin, Iin Nudiyanti, and Kobajashi T. Isamu. "Pemanfaatan dan Peningkatan Produksi Rumput Laut bagi Masyarakat Desa Torokeku, Kecamatan Tinanggea, Konawe Selatan, Sultra." Jurnal Pengabdian Pada Masyarakat 4, no. 1 (April 9, 2019): 11–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.30653/002.201941.77.

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UTILIZATION AND INCREASE OF SEAWEED PRODUCTION FOR THE COMMUNITY OF TOROKEKU VILLAGE TINANGGEA SUB-DISTRICT, KONAWE SELATAN, SOUTHEAST SULAWESI. Torokeku Village, Tinanggea Sub-District, South Konawe Regency is one of the villages that produce seaweed and various types of sea fish caught from Southeast Sulawesi. The problems faced by residents include: 1) Decreasing the amount of production and quality of seaweed, 2) Low level of entrepreneurial knowledge possessed, 3) lack of MSMEs as a single forum for independent business development for Torokeku Village residents. The specific goals and targets of the KKN-PPM: 1) Increasing the production and quality of seaweed seeds, 2) Increasing the skills of citizens in processing seaweed into various ready-to-eat and ready-to-cook products such as dodol, meatballs and seaweed nuggets, 3) Establishment and co-operative assistance for citizens. The methods used to achieve these goals are training, mentoring, lectures, discussions, direct visits, practices and demonstrations. The activities carried out included: (1) Making seaweed nursery gardens (2) Demonstration on various processed products ready to eat and ready to cook (dodol, meatballs and nuggets of seaweed), (3) Pioneering fishing cooperatives and UMKM, (4) Providing learning facilities for children and the community of Torokeku Village in the form of socializing education on the concept of sustainable fisheries as well as mentoring learning in schools and TPA.
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23

Yadav, Shiv Kumar, and Qi-jian Yi. "Percutaneous closure of congenital coronary artery fistulae in 5 children: A single center experience." Asian Journal of Medical Sciences 6, no. 4 (December 18, 2014): 45–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ajms.v6i4.11786.

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Background and Aim: Coronary artery fistulae (CAF) are rare anomalies. In this study, we have done percutaneous closure of CAF in children with three different devices; ventricle septal defect (VSD) occluder, patent ductus arterious (PDA) occluder and Cook coil.Materials and Methods: We retrospectively reviewed all patients, admitted to our heart center inpatient department between September 2004 and April 2013, that had a percutaneous closure of CAF in our center, and evaluated outcomes of patients with CAF treated with cardiac catheterization.Results: A total of fi ve patients (3 females) ranged in age from7 months to 10 years with congenital CAF underwent percutaneous closure. The fistulae had origins from right coronary artery (RCA) and from left coronary artery (LCA) in 3 cases and 2 cases respectively. One RCA drained to right atrium and rest four drained to right ventricle. All 5 cases had a co ntinuous murmur. During closure, 2 fistulae closed with VSD occluder, 2 with PDA occluder & 1 with Cook coil. Percutaneous closure was successfully achieved in all the 5 patients. Follow-up studies showed that there was complete abolition without recanalization. No deaths occurred.Conclusion: Percutaneous closure of congenital CAF is very safe and effective in children with less complication and shorter hospital stay.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ajms.v6i4.11786 Asian Journal of Medical Sciences Vol.6(4) 2015 45-50
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24

DeCicco, Lucas H. "A Contact Zone between Coastal and Interior Fox Sparrows in South-Central Alaska." Western Birds 52, no. 2 (May 1, 2021): 148–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.21199/wb52.2.4.

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I report observations, supported by museum voucher specimens, photographs, and audio recordings, from an area of breeding contact between two divergent groups of subspecies of the Fox Sparrow (Passerella iliaca) in upper Cook Inlet, south-central Alaska. In this area, covering ~50 km2, the interior iliaca group comes in contact with the Pacific coast unalaschcensis group in lowland mixed boreal forest. Phenotypically pure P. i. zaboria and P. i. sinuosa (subspecies representing the iliaca and unalaschcensis groups, respectively) occur in approximately equal abundances and outnumber intermediate phenotypes. These subspecies co-occur on a fine scale, males of zaboria and sinuosa often holding adjacent territories. I conclude that some form of pre- or post-zygotic isolating mechanism between these two subspecies-groups is hindering free interbreeding.
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25

Renold, Emma. "Becoming AGENDA: The Making and Mattering of a Youth Activist Resource on Gender and Sexual Violence." Reconceptualizing Educational Research Methodology 10, no. 2-3 (December 30, 2019): 208–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.7577/rerm.3677.

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What happens when ‘the margin of manouverability’ (Massumi 2015, p.3) in a specific socio-political context is buzzing with promise and possibility? What might some crafty and serious play with the feminist posthuman ethics of research/er reponse-ability (Barad, 2007) cook up in such a conducive soup? This paper shares the pARTicipatory praxis that informed the making of ‘AGENDA: A Young People’s Guide to Making Positive Relationships Matter’ (Renold, 2016). AGENDA is a 75 page youth-activist bi-lingual (Welsh-English) interactive resource co-created with and for young people in Wales to address gendered and sexual violence. Crafted with an affirmative cut and nurturing a run-a-way praxis that secretes its own co-ordinates, AGENDA invites a care-ful re-mattering of ‘what matters’ when it comes to conventional healthy relationships education. The paper offers a careful cartography of how AGENDA unfolded as a lively resource that continues to matter as it connects to policy and practice assemblages that push-pull the agential becomings of AGENDA on its way.
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Marino, Sara. "Cook it, eat it, Skype it: Mobile media use in re-staging intimate culinary practices among transnational families." International Journal of Cultural Studies 22, no. 6 (August 20, 2019): 788–803. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367877919850829.

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This article discusses video-based platforms as drivers of transconnective spaces for transnational families to do familyhood. By looking at how Italians living in London use Skype to re-stage family rituals at a distance, I examine the centrality of culinary practices in relation to family work. In doing this, I also expand on the role of polymedia environments in enabling emotional proximity and the formation of a sense of mediated co-presence within transnational contexts. In-depth interviews were conducted with members of the Facebook group Italian Gals in London to unpack how lived geographies of migration intersect with media technologies and practices to create a new transconnective habitus around food preparation, cooking and dining. The study reveals that while Skype provides emotional connectivity, communicative challenges and tensions can also occur as a result of the ‘ephemerality’ of video calls and as technological asymmetries emerge among transnational family members.
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Steadman, David W. "A new species of swiftlet (Aves: Apodidae) from the late Quaternary of Mangaia, Cook Islands, Oceania." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22, no. 2 (July 8, 2002): 326–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1671/0272-4634(2002)022[0326:ansosa]2.0.co;2.

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28

Tatsumi, Yoshiyuki, Kiwamu Oguri, Gen Shimoda, Tetsu Kogiso, and Hans G. Barsczus. "Contrasting behavior of noble-metal elements during magmatic differentiation in basalts from the Cook Islands, Polynesia." Geology 28, no. 2 (February 2000): 131–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0091-7613(2000)028<0131:cbonme>2.3.co;2.

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Tatsumi, Yoshiyuki, Kiwamu Oguri, Gen Shimoda, Tetsu Kogiso, and Hans G. Barsczus. "Contrasting behavior of noble-metal elements during magmatic differentiation in basalts from the Cook Islands, Polynesia." Geology 28, no. 2 (2000): 131. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0091-7613(2000)28<131:cboned>2.0.co;2.

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30

Le Pesant, Denis. "Anaphores Associatives et Classes D'objets." Lingvisticæ Investigationes. International Journal of Linguistics and Language Resources 20, no. 1 (January 1, 1996): 87–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/li.20.1.05pes.

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The "associative anaphoras" (e.g. He enters the village and goes to see the mayor), contrary to the "true anaphoras" (e.g. A policeman rings at the door; and soon the policeman leaves), are neither co-references, nor lexically identical to the antecedent. Our analysis of the associative anaphora tends to turn it into a particular case of the true anaphora. We can distinguish two main categories of associative anaphoras: those which result from an ellipsis of true anaphora, and those which result from an antecedent ellipsis of true anaphora. Here is an example of the first category: I leave a restaurant; the cook (of that restaurant, 0) is remarkable. Here is an example of the second category: He takes his temperature (with a thermometre, 0); the thermometre shows 39° C.
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Signorini, Adriana, and Cathy Pohan. "Exploring the impact of The Students Assessing Teaching and Learning Program." International Journal for Students as Partners 3, no. 2 (May 7, 2019): 139–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.15173/ijsap.v3i2.3683.

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The Students Assessing Teaching and Learning (SATAL) Program at the University of California, Merced offers assessment support for faculty and program leads while engaging diverse, cross-program undergraduates in students-as- partners experiences in a work setting. Grounded in the Students as Partners (SaP) principles of respect, responsibility, and reciprocity (Cook-Sather, Bovill, & Felten, 2014), our assessment of the SATAL program reveals benefits for both students and faculty acting as co-creators of teaching and learning. Using the SATAL program as an example, we offer readers a logic model to guide the development of student-faculty-staff partnerships and assess the impact of these programs in a more meaningful and consequential manner. We also provide lessons learned from our evolving SATAL program to support others interested in designing sustainable student assisted assessment partnerships.
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Alfano, Marila, Julien Pérard, and Christine Cavazza. "Nickel-Induced Oligomerization of the Histidine-Rich Metallochaperone CooJ from Rhodospirillum Rubrum." Inorganics 7, no. 7 (July 1, 2019): 84. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/inorganics7070084.

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[NiFe]-carbon monoxide dehydrogenase reversibly catalyzes the oxidation of CO to CO2. Its active site is a unique NiFe4S4 cluster, known as C-cluster. In Rhodospirillum rubrum, three nickel-dependent proteins, CooC, CooT and CooJ are required for Ni insertion into the active site. Among them, CooJ is a histidine-rich protein, containing two distinct and spatially separated Ni(II)-binding sites: a strictly conserved N-terminal site and a variable histidine tail at the C-terminus. Here, using biophysical techniques, we study the behavior of the protein upon Ni(II) addition. Using circular dichroism and chemical denaturation, we show that the binding of Ni(II) to the protein increases its stability. Moreover, high-order oligomers are formed through nickel–histidine tail interactions, both in vitro and in cellulo, via a dynamical and reversible process.
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Ogbonna, C. "An overview of the Effect of Biomass in-door-air Pollution on Household Members." Journal of Epidemiological Society of Nigeria 1 (February 28, 2017): 66–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.46912/jeson.16.

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Worldwide statistics show that 2.4 billion people depend on biomass fuel for cooking and heating. Biomass are plant materials and animal waste used especially as source of fuel. Typically, burned in open fire or inefficient stoves without appropriate ventilation, biomass fuels emit substantial amounts of health damaging pollutants leading to high level of exposure. In developing countries the level is at least 10-20 times higher than World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines. Women and young children who spend many hours daily near the fire are the most exposed. A growing body of literature implicates in-door air pollution from biomass fuel as a risk factor for the development of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and Lung cancer in women and Acute Respiratory Infections (ARI) in young children.4-8 About two billion people have no access to modern energy and a billion have it only sporadically. Household members especially women and children in rural settlements collect all kinds of materials that are hazardous for their source of household energy. This is peculiar to the rural populations and more so the poor communities. Biomass fuels are at the low end of the energy ladder in terms of combustion efficiency and cleanliness. Smoke from biomass combustion produces a large number of health damaging air pollutants including inhalable particulate matter, Carbon Monoxide (CO), Nitrogen oxides, Formaldehyde, Benzene, 1,3 Butadiene, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and many other toxic organic compounds. In developing countries, where large proportions of households rely on biomass fuels for cooking and space heating, concentrations of these air pollutants tend to be highest indoors. The fuels are typically burned in simple, inefficient, and mostly unvented household cook stoves, which, combined with poor ventilation, generate large volumes of smoke indoors. Moreover, cook stoves are typically used for several hours each day at times when people are present indoors, resulting in much higher exposure to air pollutants than from out-door sources. More than three billion people or half the world's populations, cook in their homes using traditional fire and stoves, burning biomass fuels such as woods and crop waste materials. Household members breathe in the toxic fumes from these cooking fires daily.
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BARTSCH-WINKLER, SUSAN, and HENRY R. SCHMOLL. "Utility of radiocarbon-dated stratigraphy in determining late Holocene earthquake recurrence intervals, upper Cook Inlet region, Alaska." Geological Society of America Bulletin 104, no. 6 (June 1992): 684–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1992)104<0684:uordsi>2.3.co;2.

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Murti, Michelle, Tesfaye Bayleyegn, Martha Stanbury, William Dana Flanders, Ellen Yard, Mawuli Nyaku, and Amy Wolkin. "Household Emergency Preparedness by Housing Type from a Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER), Michigan." Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 8, no. 1 (February 2014): 12–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/dmp.2013.111.

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AbstractObjectivesWe examined the association between housing type and household emergency preparedness among households in Oakland County, Michigan.MethodsWe used interview data on household emergency preparedness from a cluster design survey in Oakland County, Michigan, in 2012. We compared survey-weighted frequencies of household demographics, medical conditions, and preparedness measures in single-detached homes versus multi-unit dwellings, and determined the unadjusted odds ratios (OR) and the income-level adjusted OR for each preparedness measure.ResultsHouseholds had similar demographics and medical conditions between housing types. Unadjusted ORs were statistically significant for single detached homes having a generator (11.1), back-up heat source (10.9), way to cook without utilities (5.8), carbon monoxide (CO) detector (3.8), copies of important documents (3.4), evacuation routes (3.1), and 3-day supply of water (2.5). Income level adjusted ORs remained statistically significant except for owning a CO detector.ConclusionsHouseholds in multi-unit dwellings were less likely to have certain recommended emergency plans and supplies compared to those in single detached homes. Further research is required to explore the feasibility, barriers, and alternatives for households in multi-unit dwellings in terms of complying with these measures. (Disaster Med Public Preparedness. 2014;0:1–8)
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Cromb, David. "Measuring Customer Service Effectiveness20052Sarah Cook. Measuring Customer Service Effectiveness. Aldershot, Hampshire: Gower Publishing Co. October 2004. 174 pp., ISBN: 0566085380 £45 hbk." Leadership & Organization Development Journal 26, no. 7 (October 2005): 593–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/01437730510624629.

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37

Till, Nicholas. "‘First-Class Evening Entertainments’: Spectacle and Social Control in a Mid-Victorian Music Hall." New Theatre Quarterly 20, no. 1 (January 5, 2004): 3–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x03000289.

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First-Class Evening Entertainments was the title given to a variety programme presented at Hoxton Hall in East London when it first opened in 1863. In 2000 Nicholas Till and Kandis Cook were commissioned by Hoxton Hall and the English National Opera Studio to make a new music theatre piece for the Hall, which led to an investigation of the content and context of the original programme. In the following article Nicholas Till offers a reading of the 1863 programme as an example of the mid-Victorian project to exercise social control over the urban working classes. Nicholas Till is Senior Lecturer in Theatre at Wimbledon School of Art, and co-artistic director of the experimental music theatre company Post-Operative Productions. He is the author of Mozart and the Enlightenment: Truth, Virtue, and Beauty in Mozart's Operas (Faber, 1992), and is currently editing The Cambridge Companion to Opera.
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Thiede, Stephanie, Darjai Payne, Alla Aroutcheva, Michael Schoeny, Robert Weinstein, Evan Snitkin, and Kyle Popovich. "Molecular Epidemiology of Community-Onset (CO), Community-Onset Healthcare-Associated (CO-HA) and Hospital-Onset (HO) Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)." Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 41, S1 (October 2020): s70—s71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ice.2020.559.

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Background: Previous work suggests an intermingling of community and hospital transmission networks driving the MRSA epidemic, but how those with CO-HA infections fit into the network remains unclear. We integrated epidemiologic data and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) from existing MRSA clinical isolates to determine whether there were distinguishable features of CO-HA MRSA infections that could guide interventions. Methods: We examined 955 existing clinical MRSA isolates from 2011 to 2013 from patients at Cook County Health, the major public healthcare network in Chicago, Illinois. We performed electronic and manual chart review to ascertain community (eg, illicit drug use, incarceration history) and healthcare exposures and comorbidities. WGS was performed on all sequences, and sequences were typed with multilocus sequence typing (MLST). We assessed the distribution of epidemiological factors and sequence type (ST) across onset type. Results: Infections were more frequent in males (70%); 61% of individuals with infection were African American and 21% were Hispanic. Overall, wound infections were the most common (81%) followed by blood (7%) and respiratory (6%). 82% of infections were ST8 (most USA300), 8% were ST5 (USA100) and 10% were other STs (Fig. 1a). Using standard epidemiologic definitions, we identified 523 CO, 295 CO-HA, and 137 HO infections. USA300 infections were common across CO, CO-HA, and HO categories, whereas USA100 was more frequently observed among CO-HA and HO. Current illicit drug use and history of incarceration—factors typically associated with CO-MRSA—were observed among both CO-HA and HO infections. 38% of CO-HA and 36% of HO had a history of MRSA infection or nasal colonization in the prior 6 months. As expected, 73% of CO-HA had a history of recent hospitalization, but this was also true for 44% of HO cases; points for intervention for both groups, especially CO-HA patients, include outpatient, inpatient, and ER care. Diabetes was common across categories, and HIV was more commonly observed among CO-HA cases (Fig. 1b). Conclusions: We characterized the genomic and epidemiologic features of CO-HA MRSA infections relative to CO and HO. By MLST and epidemiological analysis, CO-HA infections share similarities to both CO and HO. Although USA300 infections were the most common strain type, our findings highlight the need for WGS to discern relationships between individuals to understand the intermixing of healthcare and community networks for CO-HA infections. Higher resolution genomic analysis may help guide whether interventions need to be at hospital discharge or in the community to have the most impact on decreasing CO-HA MRSA infections.Funding: Funding: from CDC Broad Agency Announcement: Genomic Epidemiology of Community-Onset Invasive USA300 MRSA Infections; Contract ID: 75D30118C02923Disclosures: None
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Gitau, James K., Cecilia Sundberg, Ruth Mendum, Jane Mutune, and Mary Njenga. "Use of Biochar-Producing Gasifier Cookstove Improves Energy Use Efficiency and Indoor Air Quality in Rural Households." Energies 12, no. 22 (November 11, 2019): 4285. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en12224285.

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Biomass fuels dominate the household energy mix in sub-Saharan Africa. Much of it is used inefficiently in poorly ventilated kitchens resulting in indoor air pollution and consumption of large amounts of wood fuel. Micro-gasification cookstoves can improve fuel use efficiency and reduce indoor air pollution while producing char as a by-product. This study monitored real-time concentrations of carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5), and amount of firewood used when households were cooking dinner. Twenty-five households used the gasifier cookstove to cook and five repeated the same test with three-stone open fire on a different date. With the gasifier, the average corresponding dinner time CO, CO2, and PM2.5 concentrations were reduced by 57%, 41%, and 79% respectively compared to three-stone open fire. The gasifier had average biomass-to-char conversion efficiency of 16.6%. If the produced char is used as fuel, households could save 32% of fuel compared to use of three-stone open fire and 18% when char is used as biochar, for instance. Adoption of the gasifier can help to reduce the need for firewood collection, hence reducing impacts on the environment while saving on the amount of time and money spent on cooking fuel.
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Boyce, Bert R. "The joy of computer communication. William J. Cook. New York: Dell Publishing Co.; 1984: 128 pp. Price: $5.95. ISBN 0-440-54412-2." Journal of the American Society for Information Science 36, no. 2 (March 1985): 137. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asi.4630360210.

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Sumrall, Theodore S. "Large Scale Fast Cook-off Sensitivity Results of a Melt Castable General Purpose Insensitive High Explosive." Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics 24, no. 2 (April 1999): 61–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1521-4087(199904)24:2<61::aid-prep61>3.0.co;2-w.

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42

Pereira, Daniel Santiago, Wesley Adson Costa Coelho, Benito Soto Blanco, and Patrício Borges Maracajá. "Produção de abelhas rainha européias (Apis mellifera), utilizando diferentes métodos de manejo em Captain Cook, Havai, EUA." ACTA Apicola Brasilica 2, no. 1 (March 13, 2014): 08. http://dx.doi.org/10.18378/aab.v2i1.3031.

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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;"><span style="mso-bidi-font-size: 12.0pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif';">Objetivou-se verificar a influencia do uso de diferentes métodos de manejo nas colmeias recria, na aceitação de larvas para produção de abelhas rainha (<em>Apis melífera ligustica</em>). O trabalho foi conduzido durante o mês de agosto de 2008, na Hawaiian Queen CO, cidade de Captain Cook, estado do Havaí, EUA. Foi utilizado o método proposto por Doolittle (1899), utilizando-se cúpulas de acrílico. Os tratamentos foram: T1- colmeia recria com rainha composta </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif';">por um ninho, tela excluidora e sobreninho (recria); T2- colmeia Recria com rainha composta por ninho, sobreninho 1, tela excluidora e sobreninho 2 (recria); T3- Introdução das larvas transferidas para ambiente com abelhas operárias órfãs e transferencia para uma colmeia recria com rainha composta por um ninho, tela excluidora e sobreninho (recria); T4- Introdução das larvas transferidas para ambiente com abelhas operárias órfãs e transferencia para uma colmeia recria com rainha composta por um ninho, sobreninho, tela excluidora e sobreninho (recria). </span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; mso-fareast-font-family: GalliardStd-Roman; mso-bidi-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-bidi-theme-font: minor-bidi;">Após execução do teste da normalidade de Shapiro-Wilk, foi executado o teste t para amostras independentes e Mann-Whitney</span><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman','serif'; mso-bidi-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-bidi-theme-font: minor-bidi;">. Verificou-se significância ao nível de 5% de probabilidade entre os tratamentos, ou seja, os tratamentos 1, 3 e 4 mostraram-se mais eficientes para aceitação das larvas e produção de rainhas.</span></p>
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43

Haeussler, Peter J., Ronald L. Bruhn, and Thomas L. Pratt. "Potential seismic hazards and tectonics of the upper Cook Inlet basin, Alaska, based on analysis of Pliocene and younger deformation." Geological Society of America Bulletin 112, no. 9 (September 2000): 1414–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(2000)112<1414:pshato>2.0.co;2.

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44

Seeb, Lisa W., Chris Habicht, William D. Templin, Kenneth E. Tarbox, Randall Z. Davis, Linda K. Brannian, and James E. Seeb. "Genetic Diversity of Sockeye Salmon of Cook Inlet, Alaska, and Its Application to Management of Populations Affected by theExxon ValdezOil Spill." Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 129, no. 6 (November 2000): 1223–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8659(2000)129<1223:gdosso>2.0.co;2.

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45

Briele, Henry A., Michael J. Walker, Linda Wild, Donald K. Wood, John A. Greager, Schlomo Schneebaum, Edibaldo Silva-Lopez, Moon-Chull Han, Teresa Gunter, and Tapas K. Das Gupta. "Results of treatment of stage I–III breast cancer in Black Americans. The Cook County Hospital experience, 1973-1987." Cancer 65, no. 5 (March 1, 1990): 1062–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(19900301)65:5<1062::aid-cncr2820650503>3.0.co;2-e.

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46

Hussein, T. S., R. B. Gilchrist, and J. G. Thompson. "327 OOCYTE-SECRETED FACTORS DIRECTLY AFFECT OOCYTE DEVELOPMENTAL COMPETENCE DURING IN VITRO MATURATION OF THE BOVINE CUMULUS - OOCYTE COMPLEX." Reproduction, Fertility and Development 18, no. 2 (2006): 271. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rdv18n2ab327.

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Paracrine factors secreted by the oocyte (oocyte-secreted factors, OSFs) regulate a broad range of cumulus cell functions including proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. The capacity of oocytes to regulate their own microenvironment by OSFs may in turn contribute to oocyte developmental competence. The aim of this study was to determine if OSFs have a direct influence on bovine oocyte developmental competence during in vitro maturation (IVM). Cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) were obtained by aspiration of >3-mm follicles from abattoir-derived ovaries. IVM was conducted in Bovine VitroMat (Cook Australia, Eight Mile Plains, Brisbane, Australia) supplemented with 0.1 IU/mL rhFSH for 24 h under 6% CO2 in air at 38.5�C. In the first experiment, COCs were co-cultured with denuded oocytes (DOs, 5/COC in 10 �L) beginning at either 0 or 9-h of IVM. To generate the 9-h DO group, COCs were first cultured intact for 9-h and then denuded. In the second experiment, specific OSFs, recombinant bone morphogenetic protein-15 (BMP-15) and growth differentiation factor 9 (GDF-9), were prepared as partially purified supernatants of transfected 293H cells, and used as 10% v/v supplements in Bovine VitroMat. Treatments were: (1) control (no supplement), (2) BMP-15, (3) GDF-9, (4) BMP-15 and GDF-9, and (5) untransfected 293H control. Following maturation, in vitro production of embryos was performed using the Bovine Vitro system (Cook Australia) and blastocysts were examined on Day 8 for development. Developmental data were arcsine-transformed and analyzed by ANOVA, followed by Tukey's test. Cell numbers were analyzed by ANOVA. Co-culturing intact COCs with DOs from 0 or 9 h did not affect cleavage rate, but increased (P < 0.001) the proportion of cleaved embryos that reached the blastocyst stage post-insemination (50.6 � 1.9 and 61.3 � 1.9%, respectively), compared to COCs cultured alone (40.7 � 1.4%). Therefore, paracrine factors secreted by DOs increased the developmental competence of oocytes matured as COCs. OSFs also improved embryo quality, as co-culture of COCs with DOs (0 or 9 h) significantly increased total cell (156.1 � 1.3 and 159.1 � 1.3, respectively) and trophectoderm (105.7 � 1.3 and 109.8 � 0.4, respectively) numbers, compared to control COCs (total = 148 � 1.2, trophectoderm = 98.2 � 0.8, P < 0.001). BMP-15 alone or with GDF-9 also significantly (P < 0.001) increased the proportion of oocytes that reached the blastocyst stage post insemination (57.5 � 2.4% and 55.1 � 4.5%, respectively), compared to control (41.0 � 0.9%) and 293H-treated (27.1 � 3.1%) COCs. GDF-9 also increased blastocyst yield (49.5 � 3.9%) but not significantly. These results are the first to demonstrate that OSFs, and particularly BMP-15 and GDF-9, directly affect bovine oocyte developmental competence. These results have far-reaching implications for improving the efficiency of IVM in domestic species and human infertility treatment, and support the role of OSF production by oocytes as a diagnostic marker for developmental competence.
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Watt, Richard K., and Paul W. Ludden. "Ni2+ Transport and Accumulation inRhodospirillum rubrum." Journal of Bacteriology 181, no. 15 (August 1, 1999): 4554–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.181.15.4554-4560.1999.

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ABSTRACT The cooCTJ gene products are coexpressed with CO-dehydrogenase (CODH) and facilitate in vivo nickel insertion into CODH. A Ni2+ transport assay was used to monitor uptake and accumulation of 63Ni2+ into R. rubrum and to observe the effect of mutations in thecooC, cooT, and cooJ genes on63Ni2+ transport and accumulation. Cells grown either in the presence or absence of CO transported Ni2+with a Km of 19 ± 4 μM and aV max of 310 ± 22 pmol of Ni/min/mg of total protein. Insertional mutations disrupting the reading frame of the cooCTJ genes, either individually or all three genes simultaneously, transported Ni2+ the same as wild-type cells. The nickel specificity for transport was tested by conducting the transport assay in the presence of other divalent metal ions. At a 17-fold excess Mn2+, Mg2+, Ca2+, and Zn2+ showed no inhibition of63Ni2+ transport but Co2+, Cd2+, and Cu2+ inhibited transport 35, 58, and 66%, respectively. Nickel transport was inhibited by cold (50% at 4°C), by protonophores (carbonyl cyanidem-chlorophenylhydrazone, 44%, and 2,4-dinitrophenol, 26%), by sodium azide (25%), and hydroxyl amine (33%). Inhibitors of ATP synthase (N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and oligomycin) and incubation of cells in the dark stimulated Ni2+ transport. 63Ni accumulation after 2 h was four times greater in CO-induced cells than in cells not exposed to CO. The CO-stimulated 63Ni2+ accumulation coincided with the appearance of CODH activity in the culture, suggesting that the 63Ni2+ was accumulating in CODH. The cooC, cooT, and cooJgenes are required for the increased 63Ni2+accumulation observed upon CO exposure because cells containing mutations disrupting any or all of these genes accumulated63Ni2+ like cells unexposed to CO.
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48

Angeline A, Anitha, Jayakumar J, and Lazarus Godson Asirvatham. "Performance Analysis of (Bi2Te3-PbTe) Hybrid Thermoelectric Generator." International Journal of Power Electronics and Drive Systems (IJPEDS) 8, no. 2 (June 1, 2017): 917. http://dx.doi.org/10.11591/ijpeds.v8.i2.pp917-925.

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A theoretical analysis on the performance of (Bi2Te3-PbTe) hybrid thermoelectric generator (TEG) is presented in this paper. The effect of different performance parameters such as output voltage, output current, output power, maximum power output, open circuit voltage, Seebeck co-efficient, electrical resistance, thermal conductance, figure of merit, efficiency, heat absorbed and heat removed based on maximum conversion and power efficiency have been analyzed by varying the hot side temperature up to 350oC and by varying the cold side temperature from 30oC to 150oC. The results showed that a maximum power output of 21.7 W has been obtained with the use of one hybrid thermoelectric module for a temperature difference of 320oC between the hot and cold side of the thermoelectric generator at matched load resistance. The figure of merit was found to be around 1.28 which makes its usage possible in the intermediate temperature (250oC to 350oC) applications such as heating of Biomass waste, heat from Biomass cook stoves or waste heat recovery etc. It is also observed that the hybrid thermoelectric generator offers superior performance over 250oC of the hot side temperature, compared to standard Bi2Te3 modules
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49

Carson, Lesley. "Cellular Pathology. D. J. Cook. Butterworth-Heinemann, London, 1998. No. of pages: 373. Price unknown. ISBN: 0 7506 3111 2." Journal of Pathology 189, no. 2 (October 1999): 294. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1096-9896(199910)189:2<294::aid-path459>3.0.co;2-c.

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50

Nebel, Oliver, Richard J. Arculus, Wim van Westrenen, Jon D. Woodhead, Frances E. Jenner, Yona J. Nebel-Jacobsen, Martin Wille, and Stephen M. Eggins. "Coupled Hf–Nd–Pb isotope co-variations of HIMU oceanic island basalts from Mangaia, Cook-Austral islands, suggest an Archean source component in the mantle transition zone." Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 112 (July 2013): 87–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2013.03.005.

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