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Liss M, Harel B, Fein D, Allen D, Dunn M, Feinstein C, Morris R, Waterhouse L, Rapin I. Predictors and correlates of adaptive functioning in children with developmental disorders. J Autism Dev Disord 2001; 31:219-30. [PMID: 11450820 DOI: 10.1023/a:1010707417274] [Citation(s) in RCA: 179] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022]
Abstract
Autism is a developmental disorder marked by impairments in socialization, communication, and perseverative behavior and is associated with cognitive impairment and deficits in adaptive functioning. Research has consistently demonstrated that children with autism have deficits in adaptive functioning more severe than their cognitive deficits. This study investigates the correlates and predictors of adaptive functioning as measured by the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales in high- and low-functioning children with autism and their age and nonverbal IQ matched controls. Thirty-five 9-year-old children with high-functioning autism (HAD) were compared with 31 age-matched children with developmental language disorder (DLD), and 40 9-year-old children with low-functioning autism (LAD) were compared with 17 age-matched children with low IQ on adaptive functioning, IQ, autistic symptomology, and tests of language and verbal memory. Results indicate that both groups with autism were significantly impaired compared to their matched controls on Socialization and Daily Living, but not Communication and that these impairments were more pronounced in the HAD group than in the LAD group. Adaptive behavior was strongly correlated with autistic symptomology only in the HAD group. Regression analyses indicated that IQ was strongly predictive of adaptive behavior in both low-functioning groups, but tests of language and verbal memory predicted adaptive behavior in the higher functioning groups. Results suggest that IQ may act as a limiting factor for lower functioning children but higher functioning children are impaired by specific deficits, including autistic symptomology and impaired language and verbal memory.
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Robins DL, Fein D, Barton ML, Green JA. The Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers: an initial study investigating the early detection of autism and pervasive developmental disorders. J Autism Dev Disord 2001; 31:131-44. [PMID: 11450812 DOI: 10.1023/a:1010738829569] [Citation(s) in RCA: 761] [Impact Index Per Article: 33.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/13/2022]
Abstract
Autism, a severe disorder of development, is difficult to detect in very young children. However, children who receive early intervention have improved long-term prognoses. The Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (M-CHAT), consisting of 23 yes/no items, was used to screen 1,293 children. Of the 58 children given a diagnostic/developmental evaluation, 39 were diagnosed with a disorder on the autism spectrum. Six items pertaining to social relatedness and communication were found to have the best discriminability between children diagnosed with and without autism/PDD. Cutoff scores were created for the best items and the total checklist. Results indicate that the M-CHAT is a promising instrument for the early detection of autism.
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Balm PW, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bean A, Begel M, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Besson A, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buehler M, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Canelli F, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cummings MA, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis GA, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Demina R, Demine P, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Desai S, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Doulas S, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Duensing S, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Graham G, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Groer L, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Hou S, Huang Y, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Kuznetsov VE, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JG, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AK, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mao HS, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Meng XC, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Moore RW, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Peters O, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Ramberg E, Rapidis PA, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rha J, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Simak V, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Soustruznik K, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thompson J, Toback D, Tripathi SM, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Van Kooten R, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Wang ZM, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Wijngaarden DA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JV, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Ratio of jet cross sections at square root of s = 630 GeV and 1800 GeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2001; 86:2523-2528. [PMID: 11289971 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.86.2523] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/29/2000] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
The D0 Collaboration has measured the inclusive jet cross section in barpp collisions at square root of s = 630 GeV. The results for pseudorapidities (eta)<0.5 are combined with our previous results at square root of s = 1800 GeV to form a ratio of cross sections with smaller uncertainties than either individual measurement. Next-to-leading-order QCD predictions show excellent agreement with the measurement at 630 GeV; agreement is also satisfactory for the ratio. Specifically, despite a 10% to 15% difference in the absolute magnitude, the dependence of the ratio on jet transverse momentum is very similar for data and theory.
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Balm PW, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bean A, Begel M, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Besson A, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buehler M, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Canelli F, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cummings MAC, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis GA, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Demina R, Demine P, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Desai S, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Doulas S, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Duensing S, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Graham G, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Groer L, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Hou S, Huang Y, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Kuznetsov VE, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JGR, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AKA, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mao HS, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Meng XC, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Moore RW, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Peters O, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Ramberg E, Rapidis PA, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rha J, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Simak V, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Soustruznik K, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thompson J, Toback D, Tripathi SM, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Van Kooten R, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Wang ZM, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Wijngaarden DA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JVD, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Measurement of the angular distribution of electrons fromW→eνdecays observed inpp¯collisions ats=1.8TeV. Int J Clin Exp Med 2001. [DOI: 10.1103/physrevd.63.072001] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/07/2022]
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Balm PW, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bean A, Begel M, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Besson A, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buehler M, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Canelli F, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cummings MA, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis GA, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Demina R, Demine P, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Desai S, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Doulas S, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Duensing S, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Graham G, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Groer L, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Hou S, Huang Y, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Kuznetsov VE, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JG, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AK, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mao HS, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Meng XC, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Moore RW, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Peters O, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Ramberg E, Rapidis PA, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rha J, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Simak V, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Soustruznik K, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thompson J, Toback D, Tripathi SM, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Van Kooten R, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Wang ZM, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Wijngaarden DA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JV, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Ratios of multijet Cross Sections in p p collisions at radical(s) = 1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2001; 86:1955-1960. [PMID: 11289829 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.86.1955] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/06/2000] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
We report on a study of the ratio of inclusive three-jet to inclusive two-jet production cross sections as a function of total transverse energy in p&pmacr; collisions at a center-of-mass energy sqrt[s] = 1.8 TeV, using data collected with the D0 detector during the 1992-1993 run of the Fermilab Tevatron Collider. The measurements are used to deduce preferred renormalization scales in perturbative O(alpha(3)(s)) QCD calculations in modeling soft-jet emission.
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Allen DA, Steinberg M, Dunn M, Fein D, Feinstein C, Waterhouse L, Rapin I. Autistic disorder versus other pervasive developmental disorders in young children: same or different? Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2001; 10:67-78. [PMID: 11315538 DOI: 10.1007/s007870170049] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
Eighteen preschool children diagnosed according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Third Edition Revised (DSM III-R) as having Pervasive Developmental Disorder-Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS) were compared to 176 children with DSM III-R Autistic Disorder (AD), and to 311 non-autistic children with developmental language disorders (DLD) (N = 201) or low IQ (N = 110). All children were partitioned into "high" and "low" cognitive subgroups at a nonverbal IQ of 80. Within cognitive subgroups, the 18 PDD-NOS children did not differ significantly from either the DLD or the AD children in verbal and adaptive skills and obtained scores intermediate between those of these groups. The PDD-NOS did not differ from the AD children in maladaptive behaviors. Both the PDD-NOS and AD children had many more of these behaviors than the non-autistic comparison groups. Children in the "high" and "low" cognitive subgroups of AD, but not of PDD-NOS, differed substantially on most measures, with the children with lower cognitive scores significantly more impaired on all measures. Similarity of PDD-NOS children to AD children in maladaptive behaviors and an intermediate position between autistic and non-autistic groups on virtually all measures explains the difficulty clinicians encounter in classifying children with PDD and raises questions about the specificity of these diagnostic subtypes of the autistic spectrum.
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Abbott B, Abdesselam A, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Bacon TC, Baden A, Baldin B, Balm PW, Banerjee S, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bauer D, Bean A, Begel M, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Besson A, Beuselinck R, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buehler M, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Canelli F, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cummings MA, Cutts D, Davis GA, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Demina R, Demine P, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Desai S, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Doulas S, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Duensing S, Duflot L, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gao M, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Graham G, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Groer L, Grünendahl S, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Hou S, Huang Y, Illingworth R, Ito AS, Jaffré M, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Kuznetsov VE, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Leggett C, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JG, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Luo C, Maciel AK, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mao HS, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Meng XC, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Moore RW, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Nunnemann T, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Papageorgiou K, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Peters O, Pétroff P, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Ramberg E, Rapidis PA, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rha J, Ridel M, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Simak V, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Soustruznik K, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thompson J, Toback D, Tripathi SM, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Van Kooten R, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Wang ZM, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Wijngaarden DA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JV, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Inclusive jet production in pp(macro) collisions. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2001; 86:1707-1712. [PMID: 11290229 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.86.1707] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/10/2000] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
We report a new measurement of the pseudorapidity (eta) and transverse-energy ( E(T)) dependence of the inclusive jet production cross section in pp(macro) collisions at square root of s = 1.8 TeV using 95 pb(-1) of data collected with the D0 detector at the Fermilab Tevatron. The differential cross section d(2)sigma/(dE(T)d eta) is presented up to eta = 3, significantly extending previous measurements. The results are in good overall agreement with next-to-leading order predictions from QCD and indicate a preference for certain parton distribution functions.
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Balm PW, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bean A, Begel M, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Besson A, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buehler M, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Canelli F, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cummings MA, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis GA, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Demina R, Demine P, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Desai S, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Doulas S, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Duensing S, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Graham G, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Groer L, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Hou S, Huang Y, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Kuznetsov VE, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JG, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AK, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mao HS, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Meng XC, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Moore RW, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Peters O, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Ramberg E, Rapidis PA, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rha J, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Simak V, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Soustruznik K, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thompson J, Toback D, Tripathi SM, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Van Kooten R, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Wang Z, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Wijngaarden DA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JV, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Search for large extra dimensions in dielectron and diphoton production. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2001; 86:1156-1161. [PMID: 11178033 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.86.1156] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/28/2000] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
We report a search for effects of large extra spatial dimensions in pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 1.8 TeV with the D0 detector, using events containing a pair of electrons or photons. The data are in good agreement with the expected background and do not exhibit evidence for large extra dimensions. We set the most restrictive lower limits to date, at the 95% C.L. on the effective Planck scale between 1.0 and 1.4 TeV for several formalisms and numbers of extra dimensions.
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Joy S, Fein D, Kaplan E, Freedman M. Quantifying qualitative features of Block Design performance among healthy older adults. Arch Clin Neuropsychol 2001; 16:157-70. [PMID: 14590184] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 04/27/2023] Open
Abstract
Block Design tasks are neuropsychologically valuable, but standard scoring sacrifices potentially useful information that could elucidate the cognitive processes underlying performance failures. Qualitative indices that were proposed in the WAIS-R-NI [Kaplan, E., Fein, D., Morris, R., & Delis, D. (1991). The WAIS-R as a neuropsychological instrument [Manual]. San Antonio, TX: Psychological Corporation] should help to remedy this situation but have received little research attention. We present WAIS-R Block Design data for 177 healthy older adults (aged 50-90) incorporating several qualitative measures, outlining normative ranges and examining age differences. Proportional scoring, counts of single-block placement and rotation errors, counts of parameter-violating errors such as breaking configuration, and availability of implicit grid information all offer potentially valuable supplementary data that can enrich clinical interpretation of Block Design protocols.
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Liss M, Fein D, Allen D, Dunn M, Feinstein C, Morris R, Waterhouse L, Rapin I. Executive functioning in high-functioning children with autism. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2001; 42:261-70. [PMID: 11280422] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/19/2023]
Abstract
Executive functioning was investigated in 34 children (24 boys and 10 girls) with developmental language disorder (DLD) and 21 children (18 boys and 3 girls) with high-functioning autistic disorder (HAD) matched on Full Scale IQ, Nonverbal IQ, age (mean age 9 year, 1 month), and SES. The DLD group had a Verbal IQ that was 10 points higher than the HAD group. These children were given the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), the Mazes subtest from the WISC-R, the Underlining test, and the Rapid Automatized Naming test. In addition, these children were given the Vineland Scales of Adaptive Functioning and the Wing Diagnostic Symptom Checklist in order to assess severity of autistic symptomatology. Results indicated that the only significant difference between the two groups on the cognitive tasks was perseverative errors on the WCST; there was no significant difference on total number of categories achieved or total number of errors on the WCST or on the other executive function measures. There was also significant overlap in the scores between the two groups and the difference in perseverative errors was no longer significant when Verbal IQ was partialled out. Executive functioning was strongly related to all IQ variables in the DLD group and particularly related to Verbal IQ in the HAD group. Although there was a relationship in the HAD group between executive functioning and adaptive functioning, as well as between executive functioning and autistic symptomatology, these relationships were generally no longer significant in the HAD group after the variance due to Verbal IQ was accounted for. The results are interpreted to indicate that although impaired executive functioning is a commonly associated feature of autism, it is not universal in autism and is unlikely to cause autistic behaviors or deficits in adaptive function.
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Joy S, Fein D, Kaplan E, Freedman M. Quantifying qualitative features of Block Design performance among healthy older adults. Arch Clin Neuropsychol 2001. [DOI: 10.1093/arclin/16.2.157] [Citation(s) in RCA: 19] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
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Liss M, Fein D, Bullard S, Robins D. Brief report: cognitive estimation in individuals with pervasive developmental disorders. J Autism Dev Disord 2000; 30:613-8. [PMID: 11261473 DOI: 10.1023/a:1005699713072] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022]
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Joy S, Fein D, Kaplan E, Freedman M. Speed and memory in WAIS-R-NI Digit Symbol performance among healthy older adults. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 2000; 6:770-80. [PMID: 11105467 DOI: 10.1017/s1355617700677044] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/05/2022]
Abstract
Although roles have been proposed for both graphomotor speed and learning in the execution of Digit Symbol, few data have been available concerning performance across the adult lifespan on the Symbol Copy, paired associates, or free recall measures derived from Digit Symbol and recommended in the WAIS-R-NI. We report findings on 177 healthy older adults (ages 50-90), providing normative data by age group, education level, and gender. As previously reported, Digit Symbol scores decline steeply with age (r = -.64). Symbol Copy speed declines almost as steeply (r = -.58). Incidental learning, however, declines only modestly (r = -.26 on both measures). Symbol Copy is a far stronger correlate of Digit Symbol (r = .72) than are paired associates or free recall (r = .26 and r = .28, respectively). The 2 incidental learning measures do, however, offer valuable supplementary information as part of a comprehensive individual assessment. When low Digit Symbol scores are produced by slowing on Symbol Copy, further evaluation of perceptual and motor speed and dexterity are indicated. When low incidental learning scores are obtained, further evaluation of memory is warranted. Qualitative analysis of errors (e.g., rotations) made on the incidental learning procedures may also be valuable.
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bean A, Begel M, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Besson A, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buehler M, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Canelli F, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Choudhary BC, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cummings MAC, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis GA, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Demina R, Demine P, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Doulas S, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Filthaut F, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Kuznetsov V, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JGR, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AKA, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mani S, Mao HS, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Meng XC, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Ramberg E, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rha J, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Simak V, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Soustruznik K, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thompson J, Toback D, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Van Kooten R, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Wang ZM, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JVD, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Search for new physics ineμXdata at DØ using SLEUTH: A quasi-model-independent search strategy for new physics. Int J Clin Exp Med 2000. [DOI: 10.1103/physrevd.62.092004] [Citation(s) in RCA: 34] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/07/2022]
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Akimov V, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Bean A, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Chen W, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Choudhary BC, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cobau WG, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cullen-Vidal D, Cummings MA, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gobbi B, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Grannis PD, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Guglielmo G, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Joffe-Minor T, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Jun SY, Juste A, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JG, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lu JG, Lucotte A, Lueking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AK, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mani S, Mao HS, Markeloff R, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McKibben T, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mihalcea D, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgoemry HE, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Padley P, Pan LJ, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Song XF, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Tarazi J, Taylor W, Tentindo-Repond S, Thomas TL, Thompson J, Toback D, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Wang H, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Whiteson D, Wightman JA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JV, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Z, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Probing Balitsky-Fadin-Kuraev-Lipatov dynamics in the dijet cross section at large rapidity intervals in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=1800 and 630 GeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2000; 84:5722-5727. [PMID: 10991039 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.84.5722] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/15/1999] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
Inclusive dijet production at large pseudorapidity intervals (Deltaeta) between the two jets has been suggested as a regime for observing Balitsky-Fadin-Kuraev-Lipatov (BFKL) dynamics. We have measured the dijet cross section for large Deltaeta in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=1800 and 630 GeV using the D0 detector. The partonic cross section increases strongly with the size of Deltaeta. The observed growth is even stronger than expected on the basis of BFKL resummation in the leading logarithmic approximation. The growth of the partonic cross section can be accommodated with an effective BFKL intercept of alphaBFKL(20 GeV)=1.65+/-0.07.
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Abbott B, Abolins M, Abramov V, Acharya BS, Adams DL, Adams M, Ahn S, Akimov V, Alves GA, Amos N, Anderson EW, Baarmand MM, Babintsev VV, Babukhadia L, Baden A, Baldin B, Banerjee S, Bantly J, Barberis E, Baringer P, Bartlett JF, Bassler U, Belyaev A, Beri SB, Bernardi G, Bertram I, Bezzubov VA, Bhat PC, Bhatnagar V, Bhattacharjee M, Blazey G, Blessing S, Boehnlein A, Bojko NI, Borcherding F, Brandt A, Breedon R, Briskin G, Brock R, Brooijmans G, Bross A, Buchholz D, Buescher V, Burtovoi VS, Butler JM, Carvalho W, Casey D, Casilum Z, Castilla-Valdez H, Chakraborty D, Chan KM, Chekulaev SV, Chen W, Cho DK, Choi S, Chopra S, Choudhary BC, Christenson JH, Chung M, Claes D, Clark AR, Cobau WG, Cochran J, Coney L, Connolly B, Cooper WE, Coppage D, Cullen-Vidal D, Cummings MA, Cutts D, Dahl OI, Davis K, De K, Del Signore K, Demarteau M, Denisov D, Denisov SP, Diehl HT, Diesburg M, Di Loreto G, Draper P, Ducros Y, Dudko LV, Dugad SR, Dyshkant A, Edmunds D, Ellison J, Elvira VD, Engelmann R, Eno S, Eppley G, Ermolov P, Eroshin OV, Estrada J, Evans H, Evdokimov VN, Fahland T, Feher S, Fein D, Ferbel T, Fisk HE, Fisyak Y, Flattum E, Fleuret F, Fortner M, Frame KC, Fuess S, Gallas E, Galyaev AN, Gartung P, Gavrilov V, Genik RJ, Genser K, Gerber CE, Gershtein Y, Gibbard B, Gilmartin R, Ginther G, Gobbi B, Gómez B, Gómez G, Goncharov PI, González Solís JL, Gordon H, Goss LT, Gounder K, Goussiou A, Graf N, Grannis PD, Green DR, Green JA, Greenlee H, Grinstein S, Grudberg P, Grünendahl S, Guglielmo G, Gupta A, Gurzhiev SN, Gutierrez G, Gutierrez P, Hadley NJ, Haggerty H, Hagopian S, Hagopian V, Hahn KS, Hall RE, Hanlet P, Hansen S, Hauptman JM, Hays C, Hebert C, Hedin D, Heinson AP, Heintz U, Heuring T, Hirosky R, Hobbs JD, Hoeneisen B, Hoftun JS, Hsieh F, Ito AS, Jerger SA, Jesik R, Joffe-Minor T, Johns K, Johnson M, Jonckheere A, Jones M, Jöstlein H, Jun SY, Kahn S, Kajfasz E, Karmanov D, Karmgard D, Kehoe R, Kim SK, Klima B, Klopfenstein C, Knuteson B, Ko W, Kohli JM, Koltick D, Kostritskiy AV, Kotcher J, Kotwal AV, Kozelov AV, Kozlovsky EA, Krane J, Krishnaswamy MR, Krzywdzinski S, Kubantsev M, Kuleshov S, Kulik Y, Kunori S, Landsberg G, Leflat A, Lehner F, Li H, Li J, Li QZ, Lima JG, Lincoln D, Linn SL, Linnemann J, Lipton R, Lu JG, Lucotte A, Leuking L, Lundstedt C, Maciel AK, Madaras RJ, Manankov V, Mani S, Mao HS, Markeloff R, Marshall T, Martin MI, Martin RD, Mauritz KM, May B, Mayorov AA, McCarthy R, McDonald J, McKibben T, McMahon T, Melanson HL, Merkin M, Merritt KW, Miao C, Miettinen H, Mincer A, Mishra CS, Mokhov N, Mondal NK, Montgomery HE, Mostafa M, da Motta H, Nagy E, Nang F, Narain M, Narasimham VS, Neal HA, Negret JP, Negroni S, Norman D, Oesch L, Oguri V, Olivier B, Oshima N, Owen D, Padley P, Para A, Parashar N, Partridge R, Parua N, Paterno M, Patwa A, Pawlik B, Perkins J, Peters M, Piegaia R, Piekarz H, Pischalnikov Y, Pope BG, Popkov E, Prosper HB, Protopopescu S, Qian J, Quintas PZ, Raja R, Rajagopalan S, Reay NW, Reucroft S, Rijssenbeek M, Rockwell T, Roco M, Rubinov P, Ruchti R, Rutherfoord J, Santoro A, Sawyer L, Schamberger RD, Schellman H, Schwartzman A, Sculli J, Sen N, Shabalina E, Shankar HC, Shivpuri RK, Shpakov D, Shupe M, Sidwell RA, Singh H, Singh JB, Sirotenko V, Slattery P, Smith E, Smith RP, Snihur R, Snow GR, Snow J, Snyder S, Solomon J, Song XF, Sorín V, Sosebee M, Sotnikova N, Souza M, Stanton NR, Steinbrück G, Stephens RW, Stevenson ML, Stichelbaut F, Stoker D, Stolin V, Stoyanova DA, Strauss M, Streets K, Strovink M, Stutte L, Sznajder A, Tarazi J, Tartaglia M, Thomas TL, Thompson J, Toback D, Trippe TG, Turcot AS, Tuts PM, van Gemmeren P, Vaniev V, Varelas N, Volkov AA, Vorobiev AP, Wahl HD, Warchol J, Watts G, Wayne M, Weerts H, White A, White JT, Wightman JA, Willis S, Wimpenny SJ, Wirjawan JV, Womersley J, Wood DR, Yamada R, Yamin P, Yasuda T, Yip K, Youssef S, Yu J, Yu Y, Zanabria M, Zheng H, Zhou Z, Zhu ZH, Zielinski M, Zieminska D, Zieminski A, Zutshi V, Zverev EG, Zylberstejn A. Measurement of the W-->taunu production cross section in pp collisions at square root s=1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2000; 84:5710-5715. [PMID: 10991037 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.84.5710] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/28/1999] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
We report on a measurement of sigma(pp-->W+X)B(W-->taunu) in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=1.8 TeV at the Fermilab Tevatron. The measurement is based on an integrated luminosity (lum) of 18 pb-1 of data collected with the D0 detector during 1994-1995. We find that sigma(pp-->W+X)B(W-->taunu)=2.22+/-0.09 (stat)+/-0. 10 (syst)+/-0.10 (lum) nb. Lepton universality predicts that the ratio of the tau and electron electroweak charged current couplings to the W boson, gWtau/gWe, be unity. We find gWtau/gWe=0.980+/-0.031, in agreement with lepton universality.
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Freedman G, Fowble B, Hanlon A, Nicolaou N, Fein D, Hoffman J, Sigurdson E, Boraas M, Goldstein L. Patients with early stage invasive cancer with close or positive margins treated with conservative surgery and radiation have an increased risk of breast recurrence that is delayed by adjuvant systemic therapy. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1999; 44:1005-15. [PMID: 10421533 DOI: 10.1016/s0360-3016(99)00112-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 218] [Impact Index Per Article: 8.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/25/2022]
Abstract
PURPOSE The association between a positive resection margin and the risk of ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) after conservative surgery and radiation is controversial. The width of the resection margin that minimizes the risk of IBTR is unknown. While adjuvant systemic therapy may decrease the risk of an IBTR in all patients, its impact on patients with positive or close margins is largely unknown. This study examines the interaction between margin status, margin width, and adjuvant systemic therapy on the 5- and 10-year risk of IBTR after conservative surgery and radiation. METHODS AND MATERIALS A series of 1,262 patients with clinical Stage I or II breast cancer were treated by breast-conserving surgery, axillary node dissection, and radiation between March 1979 and December 1992. The median follow-up was 6.3 years (range 0.1-15.6). The median age was 55 years (range 24-89). Clinical size was T1 in 66% and T2 in 34%. Seventy-three percent of patients were node-negative. Only 5 % of patients had tumors that were EIC-positive. Forty-one percent had a single excision, and 59% had a reexcision. The final margins were negative in 77%, positive in 12%, and close (< or = 2 mm) in 11%. The median total dose to the tumor bed was 60 Gy with negative margins, 64 Gy with close margins, and 66 Gy with positive margins. Chemotherapy +/- tamoxifen was used in 28%, tamoxifen alone in 20%, and no adjuvant systemic therapy in 52%. RESULTS The 5-year cumulative incidence (CI) of IBTR was not significantly different between patients with negative (4%), positive (5%), or close (7%) margins. However, by 10 years, a significant difference in IBTR became apparent (negative 7%, positive 12%, close 14%, p = 0.04). There was no significant difference in IBTR when a close or positive margin was involved by invasive tumor or DCIS. Reexcision diminished the IBTR rate to 7% at 10 years if the final margin was negative; however, the highest risk was observed in patients with persistently positive (13%) or close (21%) (p = 0.02) margins. The median interval to failure was 3.7 years after no adjuvant systemic therapy, 5.0 years after chemotherapy +/- tamoxifen, and 6.7 years after tamoxifen alone. This delay to IBTR was observed in patients with close or positive margins, with little impact on the time to failure in patients with negative margins. The 5-year CI of IBTR in patients with close or positive margins was 1% with adjuvant systemic therapy and 13% with no adjuvant therapy. However, by 10 years, the CI of IBTR was similar (18% vs. 14%) due to more late failures in the patients who received adjuvant systemic therapy. CONCLUSION A negative margin (> 2 mm) identifies patients with a very low risk of IBTR (7% at 10 years) after conservative surgery and radiation. Patients with a close margin (< or = 2 mm) are at an equal or greater risk of IBTR as with a positive margin, especially following a reexcision. A margin involved by DCIS or invasive tumor has the same increased risk of IBTR. A reexcision of an initially close or positive margin that results in a negative final margin reduces the risk of IBTR to that of an initially negative margin. A close or positive margin is associated with an increased risk of IBTR even in patients who are EIC-negative or receiving higher boost doses of radiation. The median time to IBTR is delayed; however, the CI is not significantly decreased by adjuvant systemic therapy in patients with close or positive margins-the 5 year results in these patients underestimate their ultimate risk of recurrence.
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MESH Headings
- Adult
- Aged
- Aged, 80 and over
- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use
- Axilla
- Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy
- Breast Neoplasms/pathology
- Breast Neoplasms/radiotherapy
- Breast Neoplasms/surgery
- Breast Neoplasms/therapy
- Carcinoma/drug therapy
- Carcinoma/pathology
- Carcinoma/radiotherapy
- Carcinoma/surgery
- Carcinoma/therapy
- Carcinoma in Situ/pathology
- Carcinoma in Situ/therapy
- Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast/pathology
- Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast/therapy
- Carcinoma, Lobular/pathology
- Carcinoma, Lobular/therapy
- Chemotherapy, Adjuvant
- Female
- Humans
- Lymph Node Excision
- Middle Aged
- Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/prevention & control
- Neoplasm Staging
- Neoplasm, Residual
- Risk Assessment
- Tamoxifen/therapeutic use
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Joy S, Fein D, Kaplan E, Freedman M. Information Multiple Choice among healthy older adults: characteristics, correlates, and clinical implications. Clin Neuropsychol 1999; 13:48-53. [PMID: 10937647 DOI: 10.1076/clin.13.1.48.1981] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/03/2022]
Abstract
Information Multiple Choice (WAIS-R-NI, Kaplan et al., 1991), may be valuable when used in conjunction with the standard Information subtest. Due to the reduced retrieval demands posed by its recognition format, scores should be even less susceptible to neuropathology or normal aging than are those on the standard (recall) test, facilitating assessment of premorbid attainment in individuals suffering from retrieval-related memory deficits. We provide reliability, validity, and normative data on Information Multiple Choice from a sample (N = 177) of healthy adults aged 50 - 90 years. Information Multiple Choice correlates strongly with the standard Information subtest (r = .81) and, as predicted and unlike the standard test, does not decline even in very old age. The construct validity of Information Multiple Choice is supported, and its clinical utility will be enhanced by these normative data.
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Demetri GD, Pollock R, Baker L, Balcerzak S, Casper E, Conrad C, Fein D, Hutchinson R, Schupak K, Spiro I, Wagman L. NCCN sarcoma practice guidelines. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. ONCOLOGY (WILLISTON PARK, N.Y.) 1998; 12:183-218. [PMID: 9699217] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/08/2023]
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Bacon AL, Fein D, Morris R, Waterhouse L, Allen D. The responses of autistic children to the distress of others. J Autism Dev Disord 1998; 28:129-42. [PMID: 9586775 DOI: 10.1023/a:1026040615628] [Citation(s) in RCA: 142] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023]
Abstract
The behavior of preschool children from five groups (developmental language disordered, high-functioning autistic, low-functioning autistic, mentally retarded, and normally developing) were coded in three situations: presentation of a nonsocial orienting stimulus (an unfamiliar noise) and two social situations involving simulated distress on the part of an adult with whom they were playing. Cognitive level was correlated with level of responsiveness to stimuli only for the two retarded groups (mentally retarded and low-functioning autistic). Girls showed more prosocial behavior than boys in both social situations, independent of diagnosis. The language-disordered children showed only mild and subtle social deficits. The low-functioning autistic children showed pronounced deficits in responding in all situations. The mentally retarded and high-functioning autistic children showed good awareness of all situations, but were moderately impaired in their ability to respond prosocially; they rarely initiated prosocial behavior, but did respond to specific prompts. The behavioral feature that marked both autistic groups, in contrast to all other groups, was a lack of social referencing; they did not tend to look toward an adult in the presence of an ambiguous and unfamiliar stimulus. Results are discussed in terms of variability between and among high- and low-functioning autistic children, and implications for the core deficits in autism.
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Algan O, Fowble B, McNeeley S, Fein D. Use of the prone position in radiation treatment for women with early stage breast cancer. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1998; 40:1137-40. [PMID: 9539569 DOI: 10.1016/s0360-3016(97)00939-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 31] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023]
Abstract
PURPOSE The prone position has been advocated for women with large pendulous breasts undergoing breast-conserving treatment with radiation therapy. However, there is no information in the literature regarding the coverage of the target volume with this technique. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the prone treatment position in including at least the biopsy cavity with a 2-cm margin. METHODS AND MATERIALS Eleven consecutive patients who underwent CT simulation in the prone position were included in this study. Patients underwent CT simulation in the prone position using a flat platform containing an aperture for the breast to hang through in a dependent fashion. CT slices were 5-mm thick taken at 3-mm intervals. The biopsy cavity was localized and outlined on sequential CT images using the surgical clips (when present) as well as the residual seroma. A 2-cm margin was included around the biopsy cavity to define the minimal target volume (mTV). Lateral fields were used for treatment planning. The beam arrangements were considered adequate if the mTV was totally included in the lateral fields. RESULTS Median age of the patient population was 55 years. Bra sizes ranged from 36A-44DD. The majority of patients had mammographically detected T1 lesions. Median volume of the biopsy cavity was 48 cm3. Five of 11 (45%) patients underwent reexcision of the biopsy cavity, and 6 of 11 (55%) had surgical clips placed in the biopsy cavity. Overall, 8 of 11 (73%) patients did not have the entire mTV included in the lateral opposed tangential fields in the prone position. This was especially true in patients whose biopsy cavity extended down to the chest wall. There were no other clinical factors that could predict for the adequacy of coverage in the prone position. CONCLUSION Special attention must be paid to the location of the surgical clips to determine the proximity of the biopsy cavity to the chest wall, or CT simulation should be performed to determine the exact location of the biopsy cavity prior to selecting patients with large pendulous breasts for treatment in the prone position.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Social impairments are central to the syndrome of autism. The neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) has been implicated in the regulation of social behavior in animals but has not yet been examined in autistic subjects. METHODS To determine whether autistic children have abnormalities in OT, midday plasma samples from 29 autistic and 30 age-matched normal children, all prepubertal, were analyzed by radioimmunoassay for levels of OT. RESULTS Despite individual variability and overlapping group distributions, the autistic group had significantly lower plasma OT levels than the normal group. OT increased with age in the normal but not the autistic children. Elevated OT was associated with higher scores on social and developmental measures for the normal children, but was associated with lower scores for the autistic children. These relationships were strongest in a subset of autistic children identified as aloof. CONCLUSIONS Although making inferences to central OT functioning from peripheral measurement is difficult, the data suggest that OT abnormalities may exist in autism, and that more direct investigation of central nervous system OT function is warranted.
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VanMeter L, Fein D, Morris R, Waterhouse L, Allen D. Delay versus deviance in autistic social behavior. J Autism Dev Disord 1997; 27:557-69. [PMID: 9403372 DOI: 10.1023/a:1025830110640] [Citation(s) in RCA: 37] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/05/2023]
Abstract
The pattern of acquisition of social, communication, and daily living skills was examined for autistic children, compared to retarded and normal controls, by quantifying intradomain scatter on the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales. Autistic children were matched to normal children and mentally retarded children on Vineland raw scores; group differences in scatter were examined for each domain of adaptive behavior. Autistic children had significantly more scatter on Communication and Socialization than both control groups. Item analyses showed that the autistic children had particular weaknesses on items reflecting attention to and pragmatic use of language, as well as play and reciprocal social interaction; the autistic children had particular strengths on items reflecting written language and rote language skills, and rule-governed social behavior. The number of items showing consistent group differences, however, was small, suggesting that although autistic development appears sequentially deviant and not merely delayed, individual autistic children derive their scatter from different items, and are a developmentally heterogeneous group.
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Fein D, Allen D, Dunn M, Feinstein C, Green L, Morris R, Rapin I, Waterhouse L. Pitocin induction and autism. Am J Psychiatry 1997; 154:438-9. [PMID: 9054804 DOI: 10.1176/ajp.154.3.438b] [Citation(s) in RCA: 17] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/03/2023]
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Abstract
Behavioral impairments in autism are theorized to result from abnormal neuronal organization in brain development generating 4 systemically related neurofunctional impairments: (a) canalesthesia, wherein abnormal hippocampal system function "canalizes" sensory records, disrupting integration of information; (b) impaired assignment of the affective significance of stimuli, wherein abnormal amygdaloid system function disrupts affect association; (c) asociality, wherein impaired oxytocin system function flattens social bonding and affiliativeness; and (d) extended selective attention, wherein abnormal organization of temporal and parietal polysensory regions yields aberrant overprocessing of primary representations. This model proposes that complex human behaviors may be guided by multiple overlapping neural mechanisms.
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