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Showing 1 to 12 of 122 entries
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An Empirical Analysis of the Impact of Recruitment Patterns on RDS Estimates among a Socially Ordered Population of Female Sex Workers in China.

Sociological methods & research

Yamanis TJ, Merli MG, Neely WW, Tian FF, Moody J, Tu X, Gao E.
PMID: 24288418
Sociol Methods Res. 2013 Aug;42(3). doi: 10.1177/0049124113494576.

Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) is a method for recruiting "hidden" populations through a network-based, chain and peer referral process. RDS recruits hidden populations more effectively than other sampling methods and promises to generate unbiased estimates of their characteristics. RDS's faithful...

Network Ecology and Adolescent Social Structure.

American sociological review

McFarland DA, Moody J, Diehl D, Smith JA, Thomas RJ.
PMID: 25535409
Am Sociol Rev. 2014 Dec 01;79(6):1088-1121. doi: 10.1177/0003122414554001.

Adolescent societies-whether arising from weak, short-term classroom friendships or from close, long-term friendships-exhibit various levels of network clustering, segregation, and hierarchy. Some are rank-ordered caste systems and others are flat, cliquish worlds. Explaining the source of such structural variation...

Epidemic potential by sexual activity distributions.

Network science (Cambridge University Press)

Moody J, Adams J, Morris M.
PMID: 29449942
Netw Sci (Camb Univ Press). 2017 Dec;5(4):461-475. doi: 10.1017/nws.2017.3. Epub 2017 Apr 24.

For sexually transmitted infections like HIV to propagate through a population, there must be a path linking susceptible cases to currently infectious cases. The existence of such paths depends in part on the

Structural Effects of Network Sampling Coverage I: Nodes Missing at Random.

Social networks

Smith JA, Moody J.
PMID: 24311893
Soc Networks. 2013 Oct;35(4). doi: 10.1016/j.socnet.2013.09.003.

Network measures assume a census of a well-bounded population. This level of coverage is rarely achieved in practice, however, and we have only limited information on the robustness of network measures to incomplete coverage. This paper examines the effect...

Torque Production Using Handwheels of Different Size During a Simulated Valve Operation Task.

International journal of occupational safety and ergonomics : JOSE

Schulze LJ, Goldstein D, Patel A, Stanton E, Woods J.
PMID: 10602599
Int J Occup Saf Ergon. 1997 Jan;3(3):109-118. doi: 10.1080/10803548.1997.11076368.

Opening and closing valves in industrial facilities often requires operators to use bars and wrenches as levers (cheaters) in order to overcome initial actuation forces. In order to determine more appropriate operational specifications, the maximum torque production capability was...

Supervisor and Student Expectations of Level II Fieldwork.

Occupational therapy in health care

Vogel KA, Grice KO, Hill S, Moody J.
PMID: 23944661
Occup Ther Health Care. 2004;18(1):5-19. doi: 10.1080/J003v18n01_02.

SUMMARY OBJECTIVE: The purpose was to learn if fieldwork supervisors have greater expectations of students beginning Level II fieldwork compared to five years ago and how these compared to student expectations. Supervision was examined.METHODS: Data were obtained through questionnaires...

Risk factors for tuberculosis.

Pulmonary medicine

Narasimhan P, Wood J, Macintyre CR, Mathai D.
PMID: 23476764
Pulm Med. 2013;2013:828939. doi: 10.1155/2013/828939. Epub 2013 Feb 12.

The risk of progression from exposure to the tuberculosis bacilli to the development of active disease is a two-stage process governed by both exogenous and endogenous risk factors. Exogenous factors play a key role in accentuating the progression from...

Carbon dioxide absorption and elimination in breath during minimally invasive surgery.

Journal of breath research

Eaton S, McHoney M, Giacomello L, Pacilli M, Bishay M, De Coppi P, Wood J, Cohen R, Pierro A.
PMID: 21386202
J Breath Res. 2009 Dec;3(4):047005. doi: 10.1088/1752-7155/3/4/047005. Epub 2009 Nov 27.

Carbon dioxide (CO(2)) is the gas most commonly used to inflate the body cavities during 'keyhole' surgery (e.g. laparoscopy and thoracoscopy). However, CO(2) can be absorbed, leading to increased arterial CO(2) and increased CO(2) elimination from the lungs. These...

Quantifying the Benefits of Link-Tracing Designs for Partnership Network Studies.

Field methods

Adams J, Moody J, Muth SQ, Morris M.
PMID: 24031998
Field methods. 2012 May 01;24(2):175-193. doi: 10.1177/1525822X11433997.

Difficult-to-reach populations are frequently sampled through various link-tracing based designs, which rely on interpersonal networks to identify members of the population. This article examines the substantive returns to one such multiple-link tracing design in the Colorado Springs "Project 90"...

Observations on Inflammation and Brain-Fever.

Edinburgh medical and surgical journal

Wood J.
PMID: 30331491
Edinb Med Surg J. 1817 Oct 01;13(52):438-440.

No abstract available.

A Case of Synocha.

The Medical and physical journal

Moore J.
PMID: 30489804
Med Phys J. 1801 Mar;5(25):232-235.

No abstract available.

Brain metastasis in advanced colorectal cancer: results from the South Australian metastatic colorectal cancer (SAmCRC) registry.

Cancer biology & medicine

Tapia Rico G, Price TJ, Karapetis C, Piantadosi C, Padbury R, Roy A, Maddern G, Moore J, Carruthers S, Roder D, Townsend AR.
PMID: 29372103
Cancer Biol Med. 2017 Nov;14(4):371-376. doi: 10.20892/j.issn.2095-3941.2017.0068.

OBJECTIVE: Brain metastasis is considered rare in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC); thus, surveillance imaging does not routinely include the brain. The reported incidence of brain metastases ranges from 0.6% to 3.2%.METHODS: The South Australian mCRC Registry (SAmCRC) was analyzed...

Showing 1 to 12 of 122 entries