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Jose R. Fernandez

Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham

Publications -  240
Citations -  9409

Jose R. Fernandez is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ambulatory blood pressure & Population. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 232 publications receiving 8565 citations. Previous affiliations of Jose R. Fernandez include Vanderbilt University & Columbia University.

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Waist circumference percentiles in nationally representative samples of African-American, European-American, and Mexican-American children and adolescents.

TL;DR: Age-, sex-, and ethnicity-specific WC percentiles are available for US children and adolescents and can be used as an assessment tool that could impact public health recommendations and suggest concern with respect to high WC values among certain ethnic groups.
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Electroweak measurements in electron positron collisions at W-boson-pair energies at LEP

S. Schael, +1675 more
- 30 Nov 2013 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of the four LEP experiments were combined to determine fundamental properties of the W boson and the electroweak theory, including the branching fraction of W and the trilinear gauge-boson self-couplings.
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Search for neutral MSSM Higgs bosons at LEP

S. Schael, +1282 more
TL;DR: In this paper, four LEP collaborations, ALEPH, DELPHI, L3 and OPAL, have searched for the neutral Higgs bosons which are predicted by the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM).
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A mixture model approach for the analysis of microarray gene expression data

TL;DR: A sequence of procedures involving finite mixture modeling and bootstrap inference is developed to address issues in studies involving many thousands of genes, including calorically restricted mice.
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A panel of ancestry informative markers for estimating individual biogeographical ancestry and admixture from four continents: utility and applications.

TL;DR: A panel of 176 autosomal AIMs is developed that can effectively distinguish I‐BGA and admixture proportions from four continental ancestral populations: Europeans, West Africans, Indigenous Americans, and East Asians and it is demonstrated that a large and informative AIM panel such as this can help reduce false‐positive and false‐negative associations between phenotypes and admixtures.