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Institution

Rider University

EducationLawrenceville, New Jersey, United States
About: Rider University is a education organization based out in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Dosimetry & Creativity. The organization has 881 authors who have published 1934 publications receiving 50752 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the software industry in India and the US is presented as a step toward an ethnography of transnational migration, focusing on the subject positions and forms of work created by the new international division of labor, contemporary theories of global culture and difference are brought into question through a political economy of globalization.
Abstract: This paper presents a case study of the software industry in India and the US as a step toward an ethnography of transnational migration. By focusing on the subject positions and forms of work created by the new international division of labor, contemporary theories of global culture and difference are brought into question through a political economy of globalization. The analysis suggests that the phenomena of postnational deterritorialization may be less important than the emerging forms of labor polarization within and across nation-states.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Remote 3D dosimetry was shown to be feasible with a PRESAGE® dosimeter formulation (SS2) that exhibited relative temporal stability and high accuracy when read off-site 3 days postirradiation and provides a foundation for future investigations using remote Dosimetry to study the accuracy of advanced radiation treatments.
Abstract: Purpose: This study investigates the feasibility of remote high-resolution 3D dosimetry with the PRESAGE®/Optical-CT system. In remote dosimetry, dosimeters are shipped out from a central base institution to a remote institution for irradiation, then shipped back to the base institution for subsequent readout and analysis. Methods: Two nominally identical optical-CT scanners for 3D dosimetry were constructed and placed at the base (Duke University) and remote (Radiological Physics Center) institutions. Two formulations of PRESAGE® (SS1, SS2) radiochromic dosimeters were investigated. Higher sensitivity was expected in SS1, which had higher initiator content (0.25% bromotrichloromethane), while greater temporal stability was expected in SS2. Four unirradiated PRESAGE® dosimeters (two per formulation, cylindrical dimensions 11 cm diameter, 8.5–9.5 cm length) were imaged at the base institution, then shipped to the remote institution for planning and irradiation. Each dosimeter was irradiated with the same simple treatment plan: an isocentric 3-field “cross” arrangement of 4 × 4 cm open 6 MV beams configured as parallel opposed laterals with an anterior beam. This simple plan was amenable to accurate and repeatable setup, as well as accurate dose modeling by a commissioned treatment planning system (Pinnacle). After irradiation and subsequent (within 1 h) optical-CT readout at the remote institution, the dosimeters were shipped back to the base institution for remote dosimetry readout 3 days postirradiation. Measured on-site and remote relative 3D dose distributions were registered to the Pinnacle dose calculation, which served as the reference distribution for 3D gamma calculations with passing criteria of 5%/2 mm, 3%/3 mm, and 3%/2 mm with a 10% dose threshold. Gamma passing rates, dose profiles, and color-maps were all used to assess and compare the performance of both PRESAGE® formulations for remote dosimetry. Results: The best agreements between the Pinnacle plan and dosimeter readout were observed in PRESAGE® formulation SS2. Under 3%/3 mm 3D gamma passing criteria, passing rates were 91.5% ± 3.6% (SS1) and 97.4% ± 2.2% (SS2) for immediate on-site dosimetry, 96.7% ± 2.4% (SS1) and 97.6% ± 0.6% (SS2) for remote dosimetry. These passing rates are well within TG119 recommendations (88%–90% passing). Under the more stringent criteria of 3%/2 mm, there is a pronounced difference [8.0 percentage points (pp)] between SS1 formulation passing rates for immediate and remote dosimetry while the SS2 formulation maintains both higher passing rates and consistency between immediate and remote results (differences ≤ 1.2 pp) at all metrics. Both PRESAGE® formulations under study maintained high linearity of dose response (R2 > 0.996) for 1–8 Gy over 14 days with response slope consistency within 4.9% (SS1) and 6.6% (SS2), and a relative dose distribution that remained stable over time was demonstrated in the SS2 dosimeters. Conclusions: Remote 3D dosimetry was shown to be feasible with a PRESAGE® dosimeter formulation (SS2) that exhibited relative temporal stability and high accuracy when read off-site 3 days postirradiation. Characterization of the SS2 dose response demonstrated linearity (R2 > 0.998) over 14 days and suggests accurate readout over longer periods of time would be possible. This result provides a foundation for future investigations using remote dosimetry to study the accuracy of advanced radiation treatments. Further work is planned to characterize dosimeter reproducibility and dose response over longer periods of time.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence that GDNF signaling through GFRα-1 is sufficient to direct pathfinding of migrating pronephric duct cells in axolotl embryos is provided and data suggest that PND pathfinding is accomplished by migration up a gradient of GDNF.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A series of substituted 2-phenacyl-3-phenyl-1H-pyrrole-4-carboxylates were prepared from substituted acetophenones in 6 steps as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: A series of substituted 2-phenacyl-3-phenyl-1H-pyrrole-4-carboxylates were prepared from substituted acetophenones in 6 steps. The final condensations between a chloroenal and an aminoketone were carried out under neutral conditions in parallel to yield the series listed below. Selected pyrrole derivatives proved to be potent hypolipidemic agents lowering serum triglyceride concentrations in CF-1 male mice after 14 days of I.P. administration. One agent orally lowered serum cholesterol in Sprague-Dawley male rats at 2mg/kg/day after 14 days. The agents demonstrated a lowering of mouse serum LDL- cholesterol levels and selected compounds showed an elevation of serum HDL-cholesterol levels. The cholesterol concentrations in the liver were raised while the cholesterol and triglyceride contents of the aorta were significantly lowered by the selected trisubstituted pyrrole.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the state of the art in the field of forest ecology and its relationships with agricultural, agricultural, and biospheric sciences institutions.
Abstract: 1Department of Geological, Environmental, and Marine Sciences, Rider University, Lawrenceville, New Jersey 2Forest Research Center INIA‐CIFOR, Madrid, Spain 3Forest Ecology, Department of Environmental Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH Zurich, Zürich, Switzerland 4Harvard Forest, Harvard University, Petersham, Massachusetts 5Biospheric Sciences Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland 6Department of Ecology, Institute on Ecosystems, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 7Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia

26 citations


Authors

Showing all 892 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
James Chih-Hsin Yang12760690323
Feng Chen95213853881
Vijay Mahajan7518824381
John J. Bochanski6816639951
Victor H. Denenberg5625311517
David G. Kirsch5628413992
Greg G. Qiao5534411701
Robert Kaestner512828399
John Baer451246649
Geoffrey S. Ibbott452908663
David S Followill432717881
Mark Oldham412156107
Michael Gillin391474671
Shiva K. Das371825588
Hope Corman341333882
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202214
202162
202059
201962
201864