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1  it will be useful to the wider neuroscience community.
2   They also act generously to build a strong community.
3  be of benefit to the periodontal practicing community.
4 or extracting the CDS content of a microbial community.
5 S. elongatus-E. coli K-12 as the most active community.
6  realized predation risk across species in a community.
7 ID 19, as it spreads in an age-heterogeneous community.
8 ing the growth of the V. natriegens research community.
9 ure scientific investigations and the autism community.
10 is of missense variants by a wide biological community.
11 ng and significant research focus within the community.
12  solicited feedback from the larger clinical community.
13 ceived increasing interest in the scientific community.
14 ource and freely available to the scientific community.
15 -specific integration in a complex bacterial community.
16 reliable and valuable tool for the radiomics community.
17 l transport in structuring mesopelagic NCLDV communities.
18 hromycin communities, but not in the placebo communities.
19 of diverse traits and functions in microbial communities.
20 o large-scale oceanographic control of these communities.
21 ical variables affect the stability of these communities.
22 iotic by the synergistic action of bacterial communities.
23  specialized roles for bacteria in oncogenic communities.
24 , lasting impacts on children, families, and communities.
25 plenishment and dynamics of future reef fish communities.
26 uggested diatom and dinoflagellate-dominated communities.
27  motions, similar to rafts in many bacterial communities.
28 e an important component of the marine viral communities.
29  functional potential of sequenced microbial communities.
30 topic fractionation in natural phytoplankton communities.
31  to demonstrate inducibility of multi-strain communities.
32 0% of 1673) were circumcised in intervention communities.
33 inant lineage and limited transmission among communities.
34 (2) users and scenarios, and (3) society and communities.
35 ource for both the research and the clinical communities.
36  and across economic sectors and stakeholder communities.
37 g-term persistence of many plant species and communities.
38                At study end, in intervention communities, 1228 people living with HIV (91% of 1353) w
39 ocultures than the high diversity 17 species communities (~30 vs. 10 species), and colonists collecti
40  in the monocultures than the high diversity communities (~30 vs. 3 g/m(2) ).
41 of 9% to 93%) compared with standard-of-care communities (absolute increase of 2% to 88%; prevalence
42 sed was significantly higher in intervention communities (absolute increase of 9% to 93%) compared wi
43                      We analyzed episodes of community-acquired bacterial meningitis associated with
44                          Of 2264 episodes of community-acquired bacterial meningitis between 2006 and
45 nfectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Community-acquired Pneumonia (CAP) guidelines were devel
46 k of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) and community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), it is unclear whethe
47 Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major cause of community-acquired pneumonia leading to high mortality r
48 omised patients and healthy individuals with community-acquired pneumonia remains an unmet medical ne
49 een PIV and other pathogens in patients with community-acquired pneumonia.
50  of life morbidity for children encountering community-acquired septic shock.
51 we assess the stability of macroinvertebrate communities across 105 lakes in the Swedish "lakescape."
52 tabase on the composition of angiosperm tree communities across lowland tropical South America (2,025
53 abundant Prochlorococcus, and high microbial community alpha diversity.
54            However, shifts toward more mesic communities also occurred and multiple pathways of fores
55 average level of social participation in the community also mitigated the adverse impact of housing d
56                                    A network community analysis of high metabolic cooperation but low
57                                              Community analysis with microbial co-occurrence networks
58 on between residing in food insecure hotspot communities and depression.
59 he composition and function of gut microbial communities and early-onset calcium oxalate kidney stone
60 s in the Arctic, including creation of novel communities and ecosystems.
61  nutrients, and how and why they vary across communities and ecosystems.
62  interconnected network, we identify pathway communities and hundreds of previously unknown pathway c
63 g a disproportionate toll on ethnic minority communities and magnifying existing disparities in healt
64 e distinct microplastic-associated bacterial communities and microplastic uptake pathways into bivalv
65  biogeochemical cycles, yet their biological communities and related carbon dynamics are highly sensi
66 icine should cocreate MOC with the physician community and apply innovative adult education technique
67 e effects on particular biota, as well as on community and ecosystem properties.
68 ld play a role in the interplay of microbial community and environment across various bloom stages.
69 ' growth occurs with changes in phototrophic community and granular morphology.
70 ns each year, devastates families and entire communities, and cripples the health care system.
71 ith impacts likely cascading to populations, communities, and ecosystems.
72 ctions, 517,818 (83%) had their onset in the community, and 104,572 (17%) had their onset in the hosp
73                    Root-associated microbial communities are important for maintaining agricultural p
74 on the assembly and functioning of reef fish communities are largely unknown.
75 tionship strengths and the giraffes in these communities are more exclusive in their associations.
76 ying the compositions and functions of these communities are nutritional interdependencies among indi
77 e results show that halite-entombed archaeal communities are resilient to entombment durations of up
78 participating in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study and 2390 participating in the M
79 Hypertension and the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study.
80 up and top-down control regulates ecological communities as a mechanism linking ecological gradients
81 ve been object of interest in the scientific community as well as in the industry.
82 for a long time overlooked by the scientific community, as it was previously considered to be an arti
83 y enabling the expansion of detection in the community, as well as in close organic groups, such as h
84  present a framework to quantitatively infer community assembly mechanisms by phylogenetic bin-based
85  result from regional species pool and local community assembly mechanisms.
86 xamining community composition and inferring community assembly processes across four major habitat t
87                      We found that bacterial community assembly was predictable from linear combinati
88 ce of variable selection, for soil bacterial community assembly within islands.
89 rious ecological processes thought to govern community assembly, and facilitate development of microb
90 d reduction in the evolutionary diversity of communities at low precipitation.
91  Australian asylum seeker populations (i.e., community-based arrangements, community detention, onsho
92 valence settings in South Africa and Uganda, community-based delivery of ART significantly increased
93 d (oldest 3-8 years) to 1 of 4 programs: (1) community-based HIV care program, (2) program 1 + nutrit
94                     Using data from a large, community-based integrated health care setting, we exami
95                                              Community-based interventions have reduced CVD risk in A
96 seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies in a community-based population with acute loss of smell and/
97 TICIPANTS: A retrospective cohort study of 2 community-based samples: the Multi-Ethnic Study of Ather
98 status of 0-2 recruited from 146 academic or community-based sites in the USA, Europe, the Middle Eas
99                                 However, few community-based studies have been published and the true
100                      We conducted a baseline community-based survey followed by a cluster randomised
101 nking water is a perpetual concern in Arctic communities because of challenging climatic conditions,
102 tely capturing certain stereotypical dynamic community behaviors in noisy situations.
103  longstanding interest in studying microbial communities below ground, while little attention has his
104 in the children residing in the azithromycin communities, but not in the placebo communities.
105 rom an environment, we can still study these communities by isolating and sequencing DNA directly fro
106                   The profiling of bacterial communities by the sequencing of housekeeping genes such
107  which the chemistry and biomedical research communities can access a comprehensive summary of fundam
108 sion can result in source-sink dynamics: one community can sustain a micro-epidemic in another commun
109 shape network structure, leading to dramatic community changes, including loss of species and functio
110          Therefore, in a migrating microbial community coexistence of bacteria and phages implies the
111         In the ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk In Communities) cohort, VTE risk associated with incident H
112        This study, made possible with strong community collaboration, provides new insights on the po
113 s differ between lotic habitats by examining community composition and inferring community assembly p
114                    We explored how bacterial community composition and underlying ecological assembly
115              Soil carbon (C) pools and plant community composition are regulated by nitrogen (N) and
116 r periods associated with greater changes in community composition in these settings.
117 bacteria using 16S rRNA sequences, bacterial community composition of a sediment was associated with
118 c root length, in driving rhizosphere fungal community composition, demonstrating the potential for r
119 ading to shifts in ecosystem functioning and community composition.
120 ort and associated with changes in microbial community composition.
121         Our goal was to assess the microbial community compositions and metabolic capacity, and to id
122 of mucosal biopsies to explore the microbial communities' compositions of terminal ileum and large in
123                                   We see how community context affects resource usage and detect gene
124 pecific variation in dispersal behaviour and community context influence dispersal dynamics in simple
125 ature effects on host-parasite dynamics in a community context to truly know their bottom line effect
126 d metabolic pathways to fitness in different community contexts, study various ecological processes t
127 species have different dynamics in different community contexts.
128     Periodically retraining the model on the community-contributed data will ensure that Cellpose imp
129 tal inequality between two otherwise similar communities could either be decreased or increased throu
130  in areas with receding and consistently low community COVID-19 rates.
131                                        Mayan communities cultivate a great variety of plant foods tha
132 lations (i.e., community-based arrangements, community detention, onshore immigration detention, offs
133 c verification algorithm among patients with community-diagnosed asthma in the United States.
134 ty; however, little is known about how these communities differ with location.
135                          Both beetle and ant communities differed between treatments, however, with s
136   However, the composition of this bacterial community differs considerably between studies.
137 indings emphasize the importance of symbiont community diversity and stochasticity as components of h
138        Our results indicate that methylating communities dominated by diverse anaerobic microorganism
139 e sulfate can produce MeHg as effectively as communities dominated by sulfate-reducing populations.
140 g to bioaccumulation in fish and exposure to communities downstream.
141    Our objective is to foster development of community-driven data-reporting standards and a computat
142 opulation attributable fraction of TB in the community due to incarcerated cases was estimated throug
143                         In a large sample of community-dwelling individuals, acute exercise elicits w
144 sents a substantial barrier to understanding community dynamics and ecosystem functioning.
145 found considerable variation across sites in community dynamics in response to climate change.
146                        We examined microbial community dynamics in this population utilizing novel gr
147 ly explicit simulation model that tracks the community dynamics of microbial mutualists, pathogens, a
148 e outline the lessons learned, so that other communities (e.g. those working on other taxa) can adapt
149  implemented a multi-arm, cluster-randomised community effectiveness trial in three rural subcounties
150  initially had heat-sensitive algal symbiont communities, endured bleaching, and then recovered throu
151 nergy stored, greater energy flow and higher community-energy-use efficiency across the entire trophi
152 ban areas in 2007 to 2018 in order to inform community-engaged prevention and policy strategies.
153                   The intervention comprised community engagement and existing community health worke
154 rs for Disease Control and Prevention define community engagement as "the process of working collabor
155 ng, and decision aids; screening checklists; community engagement; and provider training.
156 ling to infer the characteristics of various communities engaging with each preprint on Twitter.
157             Our results suggest that aquatic communities exhibit a range of responses to climate chan
158 -driven transmission frequently occurs: many communities export and import strains.
159                                           In communities facing a delay between specimen collection a
160  of protective immunity have left vulnerable communities fearful that they may become the center of n
161 espectively, on the decline of coastal coral communities following the development of the Pearl River
162 easing interest to scientific and industrial communities for multi-functional applications.
163 nes the class of Stochastic Block Models for community formation with Gaussian processes to model cha
164                     We sampled gut microbial communities from 55 moose in a population experiencing d
165  species presence and abundance in microbial communities from a macroecological standpoint.
166 n targeted metagenomics to compare microbial communities from EDC and sputum samples of patients acco
167 th higher H(2) abundance, sediment microbial communities from the basaltic catchment exhibited signif
168 early days of the genome era, the scientific community has relied on a single 'reference' genome for
169                          The disease ecology community has struggled to come to consensus on whether
170  is a global challenge, which the scientific community has tackled by mounting extensive global colla
171                              52 multidisease community health campaigns were held throughout the prog
172 describe primary care services offered by US community health centers in March through May 2020, incl
173 munity-level interventions should expand the community health worker workforce, assess general (rathe
174  comprised community engagement and existing community health worker-led mobile health-supported earl
175 baseline were recruited from 35 academic and community hospitals in ten countries.
176 F was conducted in 26 IDP camps and 963 host communities in 12 local government areas (LGAs) with ano
177                                    Bacterial communities in biofilters can improve drinking water qua
178               Overall diversity of bacterial communities in house dust was similar by asthma status b
179                                         Bird communities in intensive-agricultural habitats proved mo
180 at primary health care centers in low-income communities in Karachi, Pakistan.
181  interactions and node attributes to extract communities in multilayer networks.
182 eractions between infections and cancer cell communities in order to develop innovative cancer treatm
183 terns and their relationship to HIV among 38 communities in Rakai, Uganda with HIV prevalence ranging
184 iversity, activity and adaptations of fungal communities in the deep oceanic crust from ~10 to 780 mb
185 ter level of connectedness between microbial communities in the tall cultivars relative to semi-dwarf
186  influence host physiology in two Indigenous communities in the Torres Strait Islands: Mer, a remote
187 vironmental pressures affecting invertebrate communities in two ecoregions (north, south) using a 23
188  role of a properly assembled leaf bacterial community in phyllosphere health.
189  We highlight the influence of the carnivore community in shaping these relationships, as the coyote
190  been less well recognized by the scientific community in this capacity.
191 nity can sustain a micro-epidemic in another community in which transmission is too low to be self-su
192 els jointly increased the performance of the community, indicating ecosystem-wide multitrophic comple
193 he composition and activity of the microbial community involved.
194 the drivers of natural selection within such communities is extremely challenging, and it is thus unc
195 the expertise of the biomedical and clinical communities is imperative to expand the available therap
196 and lab results show that the photoautotroph community is an important driver for CH(4) production an
197                                       Future community-level interventions should expand the communit
198 led with improved methods for characterizing communities, might lead to improved fertilizer use effic
199 to which spatial variation in soil microbial communities modulates plant species' distributions remai
200 uring the COVID-19 pandemic, which may leave communities more vulnerable to vaccine-preventable disea
201 he loss of transboundary species, the global community must be prepared to invest in some regions fac
202              We found the resident microbial communities not only suppressed growth and colonisation
203 ect microorganisms dominate marine microbial communities numerically, with impacts ranging from host
204       To address this issue, we propose that communities of 'rigor champions' be established to campa
205 public health messages that directly address communities of color might contribute to racial and ethn
206 ffective survival strategy for near complete communities of haloarchaea.
207 cterization of deep-sea benthic invertebrate communities of the Galapagos, across a range of habitats
208          Here, we use controlled, replicated communities of two Tribolium species (T. castaneum and T
209                                      Using a community of beetle species, we show that when dispersal
210     The human nasal passages host a distinct community of microbes.
211 tle is known about the effect of a patient's community of residence on surgical outcomes.
212 re, we report on the chemistry and microbial community of the highly reducing sediment of Colour Peak
213                                   Ecological communities often show changes in populations and their
214 communities to starkly differ from microbial communities on other inert surfaces, which is particular
215 ewcomers and to stimulate discussions in the community on further developments in this field, rather
216         Participants were recruited from 272 community oncology practices or academic medical centres
217  the ability of this method to track dynamic community organization during human seizures, using inva
218 ty, acknowledgment of racism/inequality, and community perceptions of mask wearing.
219             This essay describes the role of community pharmacists in implementing the system and dis
220                                     When the community prevalence of COVID-19 is low, a large gap exi
221                        SpikeForest documents community progress in automated spike sorting, and guide
222 ve malaria vector control and provide better community protection against clinical malaria in pyrethr
223  nNILs are a valuable resource for the maize community, providing an extensive collection of introgre
224 tor-induced trait changes through particular communities remains a challenge.
225 ld feature to optimise their use as powerful community resources for crop research, development and b
226 s and Environment on Asthma and the European Community Respiratory Health Survey) were included.
227 ost microbial growth; however, the microbial community response has not been fully understood.
228                 To understand the ecological community response measured using amplicon sequencing, w
229               In addition, soil pH and plant community richness both explained significant variation
230 uce a measure to quantify the asymmetry of a community's feasibility domain using the column vectors
231 prediction for incident HF in a contemporary community sample.
232 ying risk levels, and service contexts (e.g.,community, school, home, health care systems) are review
233                                              Community screening and therapeutic prevention strategie
234 tivity of the laboratory assays, prospective community screenings, and healthcare seeking behaviors.
235 or SARS-CoV-2 by BinaxNOW TM and RT-PCR in a community setting, rapid assay sensitivity was 100%/98.5
236 ence to prevention measures, particularly in community settings.
237 ce of holobiont adaptation (i.e., a symbiont community shift) versus acclimation (i.e., physiological
238                            In fire-dependent communities, similar to the North American prairie, fire
239  actual food consumption, showing that these communities situated a few hundred meters apart had sign
240 e link between individual clusters and wider community spread.
241 s and focus groups with national experts and community stakeholders and mothers; and 4) a review of p
242               The high diversity microbiota, Community State Type IV-B, was the most prevalent in bot
243 cies composition is also contingent on early community states, not only because of differences in the
244         Nevertheless, the effects on overall community structure and diversity were minor and varied
245 nous disturbance regimes in studies of plant community structure and function.
246  of the 21st century, could thus disrupt the community structure and productivity of a critical funct
247 h Gaussian processes to model changes in the community structure as a smooth function of time.
248 will affect ecosystem productivity and plant community structure during the growing season.
249  of the networks can be accounted for by the community structure.
250 (1996-1998) from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study, we quantified the associations of eGF
251  of AO and discusses the consequences for AO communities subjected to different agricultural practice
252        Unlike other properties of ecological communities such as abundance and richness, we know rela
253 ch subsequently spread locally before active community surveillance was implemented.
254                            We then find that communities that are closer to traditional compounds of
255 gh mortality and morbidity in rural tropical communities that typically experience delayed access to
256 hout HGT - can be collectively retained by a community that engages in costly HGT.
257 ay not play a significant role in microbiome communities, they could serve as opportunistic pathogens
258 ent of pathogens is altering populations and communities through a variety of direct and indirect eco
259 t research so far has not shown Plastisphere communities to starkly differ from microbial communities
260  We present the method as a challenge to the community to determine its security.
261                  Using the microphytobenthos community to directly introduce a pulse of labile carbon
262       SONATA format is free and open for the community to use and build upon with the goal of enablin
263 epresenting lower trophic levels (e.g., fish communities) to build flow-ecology relationships, rather
264  know the true CDS content of the underlying communities, to determine the relative performance (sens
265                      This is the first known community transmission case of the novel coronavirus dis
266 c but rather to an intermingling of distinct community transmission networks.
267 could delay continental resurgence and limit community transmission of COVID-19.
268 RS-CoV-2 RNA by quantitative PCR, suggesting community transmission of SARS-CoV2 in Wuhan in early Ja
269  outbreaks are suggestive of contemporaneous community transmission.
270 rued by students and faculty, accounting for community transmissions.
271                                    Bacterial community transplantation experiments demonstrated a cau
272 ed to species to assess beetle diversity and community variation.
273  points, 95% CI -16.00 to -8.83, p < 0.001); community violence victimisation, 36.25% and 28.37% (ARD
274 able to exposure and this can be enhanced by communities' vulnerabilities.
275 ne profiling demonstrated that the microbial community was dominated by sulfur oxidising bacteria, su
276 set of 144 wild chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) communities, we show that chimpanzees exhibit greater be
277 nutrients were incorporated into the benthic community, we collected macroalgae over 10 days followin
278 catalyze further pipeline improvement by the community, we develop a benchmark pipeline for inference
279  children ages 1-9 years in Tanzania from 50 communities were followed at baseline and for 6 months a
280 ient N deposition was high suggesting fungal communities were pushed beyond an environmental stress t
281                                           15 communities were randomly assigned to receive HIV preven
282        In contrast, changes in the microbial community were minor and transient, and very few differe
283                                     In urban communities, where animal contact is rare, risk factors
284 al environment and supporting social ties in communities, which can reduce depression and contribute
285 peptidases derived from wastewater microbial communities, which is a major impediment for the design
286                                          The communities whose phylogenetic diversity primarily align
287 ticular relevance to the crystal engineering community, whose goal is the design of solids with bespo
288 olorado Rocky Mountains to perform the first community-wide quantification of the drivers of bee phen
289 sion, we investigate whether school-based or community-wide treatment strategies are required for ach
290 refine projections of how species and biotic communities will respond to future change.
291 ng the finding of reduced child mortality in communities with biannual treatment with azithromycin re
292                                              Communities with high proportions of Latino/a residents,
293  legal floodplain underestimated impacts for communities with higher proportions of older adults, dis
294 c, translational, and public health research communities with predictive insights that may help study
295 ng the PlaToLoCo meta-server, we provide the community with a fast and easily accessible tool for the
296           A high diversity vaginal microbial community with paucity of Lactobacillus species was asso
297 mpositional) diversity of airborne bacterial communities, with diversity decreasing roughly with heig
298 nes harboured complex and variable bacterial communities, with Tatumella as the most abundant genus a
299 ixed interbacterial species and interkingdom communities within intact biofilms formed on teeth of to
300 and coral persistence, particularly as coral communities worldwide are declining at rapid rates.

 
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