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J. S. Holloway

Researcher at Earth System Research Laboratory

Publications -  63
Citations -  5000

J. S. Holloway is an academic researcher from Earth System Research Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Troposphere & Aerosol. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 63 publications receiving 4759 citations. Previous affiliations of J. S. Holloway include University of Bristol & University of Colorado Boulder.

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Incidence of schizophrenia and other psychoses in ethnic minority groups: results from the MRC AESOP study

TL;DR: Findings suggest that either additional risk factors are operating in African-Caribbeans and Black Africans or that these factors are particularly prevalent in these groups, and that such factors increase risk for schizophrenia and mania inThese groups.
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Heterogeneity in incidence rates of schizophrenia and other psychotic syndromes: Findings from the 3-center ÆSOP study

TL;DR: There is significant and independent variation of incidence of schizophrenia and other psychoses in terms of sex, age, ethnicity, and place, which confirms that environmental effects at the individual, and perhaps neighborhood level, may interact together and with genetic factors in the etiology of psychosis.
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Relationships between ozone and carbon monoxide at surface sites in the North Atlantic region

TL;DR: In this article, the seasonal cycles of the medians and the means of O3 and CO are qualitatively similar to the cycles observed at other northern midlatitude sites, and the influence of the natural stratospheric O3 source is apparent at Sable Island, particularly in the spring.
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Transport of Asian ozone pollution into surface air over the western United States in spring

TL;DR: In this article, a global high-resolution (50 50 50 km 2 ) chemistry-climate model (GFDL AM3) with full stratosphere-troposphere chemistry nudged to reanalysis winds successfully reproduces observed sharp ozone gradients above California, including interleaving and mixing of Asian pollution and stratospheric air associated with complex interactions of midlatitude cyclone air streams.