J
Jerome R. Cox
Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis
Publications - 80
Citations - 1930
Jerome R. Cox is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Broadband networks & Asynchronous Transfer Mode. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 80 publications receiving 1908 citations. Previous affiliations of Jerome R. Cox include University of Washington.
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AZTEC, a Preprocessing Program for Real-Time ECG Rhythm Analysis
TL;DR: A preprocessing program developed for real-time monitoring of the electrocardiogram by digital computer has proved useful for rhythm analysis.
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Relation between infarct size and ventricular arrhythmia.
TL;DR: The results suggest that the severity of ventricular arrhythmia early after myocardial infarction is related to the extent ofMyocardial injury as estimated enzymatically, and the apparent efficacy and therefore the evaluation of antiarrhythmic agents early after the heart attack may be influenced by the magnitude of injury sustained by the heart.
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Digital analysis of the electroencephalogram, the blood pressure wave, and the electrocardiogram
TL;DR: Computer analysis of the ECG has been directed toward morphological and rhythm diagnosis, having great potential utility in clinical heart stations, and toward rhythm monitoring, a most practical application arising in coronary intensive care units.
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Design of a large scale multimedia storage server
TL;DR: The architecture relies on innovative data striping and real-time scheduling to allow a large number of guaranteed concurrent accesses, and uses separation of metadata from real data to achieve a direct flow of the media streams between the storage devices and the network.
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Statement on Use of DNA Testing for Presymptomatic Identification of Cancer Risk
Francis S. Collins,Lennette J. Benjamin,David Botstein,Jerome R. Cox,Norman Davidson,Joe W. Gray,Neil A. Holtzman,David E. Housman,Kay Redfield Jamison,Rodney Rothstein,Diane C. Smith,Lloyd M. Smith,M. Anne Spence,Shirley M. Tilghman +13 more
TL;DR: Two relatively common heritable cancer risk genes have recently been located and it appears that as many as 10% carry an altered germline copy of a gene called MSH2 .