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Institution

Dartmouth College

EducationHanover, New Hampshire, United States
About: Dartmouth College is a education organization based out in Hanover, New Hampshire, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 20740 authors who have published 51426 publications receiving 2796969 citations. The organization is also known as: Dartmouth.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This guideline is designed to establish clinical practice recommendations for the pharmacologic treatment of chronic insomnia in adults, when such treatment is clinically indicated, and includes drugs that are FDA-approved for the treatment of insomnia, as well as several drugs commonly used to treat insomnia without an FDA indication.
Abstract: Introduction:The purpose of this guideline is to establish clinical practice recommendations for the pharmacologic treatment of chronic insomnia in adults, when such treatment is clinically indicat...

765 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This clinical experience appears to be the first report of active near-field microwave imaging of the breast and is certainly the first attempt to exploit model-based image reconstructions from in vivo breast data in order to convert the measured microwave signals into spatial maps of electrical permittivity and conductivity.
Abstract: Despite its recognized value in detecting and characterizing breast disease, X-ray mammography has important limitations that motivate the quest for alternatives to augment the diagnostic tools that are currently available to the radiologist. The rationale for pursuing electromagnetic methods is strong given the data in the literature, which show that the electromagnetic properties of breast malignancy are significantly different than normal in the high megahertz to low gigahertz spectral range, microwave illumination can effectively penetrate the breast at these frequencies, and the breast is a small readily accessible tissue volume, making it an ideal site for deploying advanced near-field imaging concepts that exploit model-based image reconstruction methodology. In this paper a clinical prototype of a microwave imaging system, which actively illuminates the breast with a 16-element transceiving monopole antenna array in the 300-1000 MHz range, is reported. Microwave exams have been delivered to five women through a water-coupled interface to the pendant breast with the participant positioned prone on an examination table. This configuration has been found to be a practical, comfortable approach to microwave breast imaging. Sessions lasted 10-15 min per breast and included full tomographic data acquisition at seven different array heights beginning at the chest wall and moving anteriorly toward the nipple for seven different frequencies at each array position. This clinical experience appears to be the first report of active near-field microwave imaging of the breast and is certainly the first attempt to exploit model-based image reconstructions from in vivo breast data in order to convert the measured microwave signals into spatial maps of electrical permittivity and conductivity. While clearly preliminary, the results are encouraging and have supplied some interesting findings. Specifically, it appears that the average relative permittivity of the breast as a whole correlates with radiologic breast density categorization and may be considerably higher than previously published values, which have been based on ex vivo tissue specimens.

765 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 Feb 2011-Cell
TL;DR: Tether-pulling force measurements in cells and in plasma membrane spheres demonstrate that caveola flattening and disassembly is the primary actin- and ATP-independent cell response that buffers membrane tension surges during mechanical stress.

763 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review is an attempt to indicate which sets of phantoms are optimal for specific applications, and provide links to studies that characterize main phantom material properties and recipes.
Abstract: Optical spectroscopy, imaging, and therapy tissue phantoms must have the scattering and absorption properties that are characteristic of human tissues, and over the past few decades, many useful models have been created. In this work, an overview of their composition and properties is outlined, by separating matrix, scattering, and absorbing materials, and discussing the benefits and weaknesses in each category. Matrix materials typically are water, gelatin, agar, polyester or epoxy and polyurethane resin, room-temperature vulcanizing (RTV) silicone, or polyvinyl alcohol gels. The water and hydrogel materials provide a soft medium that is biologically and biochemically compatible with addition of organic molecules, and are optimal for scientific laboratory studies. Polyester, polyurethane, and silicone phantoms are essentially permanent matrix compositions that are suitable for routine calibration and testing of established systems. The most common three choices for scatters have been: (1.) lipid based emulsions, (2.) titanium or aluminum oxide powders, and (3.) polymer microspheres. The choice of absorbers varies widely from hemoglobin and cells for biological simulation, to molecular dyes and ink as less biological but more stable absorbers. This review is an attempt to indicate which sets of phantoms are optimal for specific applications, and provide links to studies that characterize main phantom material properties and recipes.

763 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The presence of diverse endogenous siRNAs in normal worms suggests ongoing, genome-wide gene silencing by RNAi, and suggests that diverse modes of small RNA-mediated gene regulation are deployed innormal worms.

760 citations


Authors

Showing all 20952 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard A. Flavell2311328205119
Stuart H. Orkin186715112182
Paul G. Richardson1831533155912
Kenneth C. Anderson1781138126072
Yang Yang1642704144071
Michael B. Sporn15755994605
Kun-Liang Guan14342794520
Joseph E. LeDoux13947891500
Edward L. Glaeser13755083601
Carl Nathan13543091535
Nikhil C. Munshi13490667349
George A. Bray131896100975
Valerie W. Rusch13158173809
Kim A. Eagle12982375160
Gerald R. Crabtree12837160973
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202384
2022324
20212,602
20202,487
20192,181
20182,085