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David C. Page

Researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publications -  523
Citations -  47344

David C. Page is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Y chromosome & X chromosome. The author has an hindex of 110, co-authored 509 publications receiving 44119 citations. Previous affiliations of David C. Page include Hennepin County Medical Center & University of California, Los Angeles.

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Intrachromosomal homologous recombination between inverted amplicons on opposing Y-chromosome arms.

TL;DR: Findings highlight the recombinogenic nature of the MSY, as intrachromosomal NAHR occurs for nearly all Y-chromosome amplicon pairs, even those located on opposing chromosome arms.

Hawkes Process Modeling of Adverse Drug Reactions with Longitudinal Observational Data

TL;DR: Experimental results on a large-scale cohort of real-world EHRs demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms a leading approach, multiple self-controlled case series (Simpson et al., 2013), in identifying benchmark ADRs defined by the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership.
Proceedings Article

A Learnability Model for Universal Representations and Its Application to Top-down Induction of Decision Trees

TL;DR: The U-learnability model is used to analyze a top-down decision tree induction algorithm and proves that an idealized variant of the well-known decision tree learning algorithm CART is a U-learner under a natural set of assumptions regarding target hypotheses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paramedic student adherence to the National Standard Curriculum recommendations.

TL;DR: A vast majority of paramedic students are not completing all of the NSC-P recommendations, and the reasons for this shortcoming are likely multifaceted and require further research.

Intrachromosomal homologous recombination between inverted amplicons on opposing Y-chromosome arms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report the formation of four men with Y chromosomes that evidently formed by intrachromosomal non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR) between inverted repeat pairs comprising one amplicon on the short arm and one amplifier on the long arm.