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1                             Here, we present CoSTA: a novel approach to learn spatial similarities be
2                             Four decades ago Costa and colleagues identified a small, secreted polype
3                             Mariana Pinto da Costa and Robert Stewart provide commentary on a large p
4 1.71; P < .001) for a cluster in east Contra Costa and west San Joaquin Counties, compared with perso
5                                              CoSTA can be applied to any spatial transcriptomics data
6       The other US project leaders are Kevin Costa (Cardiovascular Research Center, Icahn School of M
7                         Jin, Tecuapetla, and Costa combined in vivo electrophysiology with optogeneti
8 counties (San Francisco, Alameda, and Contra Costa counties) were accurately reporting vancomycin res
9                    Alameda County and Contra Costa County had rates of resistance of </=10% from isol
10                               Recent work by Costa et al. (2013) and Gao et al. (2013) has examined t
11               In this issue of Neuron, Renno-Costa et al. introduce a theoretical model wherein the c
12                                Eli Lilly, Da Costa Family Foundation for Research in Breast Cancer Pr
13                    See also the editorial by Costa in this issue.
14 al transcriptomics data, we demonstrate that CoSTA learns spatial relationships between genes in a wa
15  Shahriar H, Uddin MN, Islam T, Graziano JH, Costa M, Gamble MV.
16                   In a recent paper in Cell, Costa-Mattioli et al. present data from a pharmacogeneti
17 of this is provided in this issue of Cell by Costa-Mattioli et al., whose results implicate a single
18  membrane complex of this protozoan, and the costa of Tritrichomonas foetus; c) the flagellulm of try
19 ls of the RNA helicase EIF4A3 cause Richieri-Costa-Pereira syndrome (RCPS) and copy number variations
20 he RNA-binding protein EIF4A3 cause Richieri-Costa-Pereira syndrome (RCPS), an autosomal recessive co
21                                     Richieri-Costa-Pereira syndrome is an autosomal-recessive acrofac
22                                              CoSTA provides a quantitative measure of expression patt
23  J., Casulleras, M., Duran-Guell, M., Flores-Costa, R., Perez-Romero, N., Forne, M., Dalli, J., Clari
24 entina (7.2 tonnes), Colombia (2.07 tonnes), Costa Rica (1.13 tonnes), Equador (2.16 tonnes), and Ven
25 igned to Trinidad (164), French Guiana (72), Costa Rica (44), St.
26 isolated population of the Central Valley of Costa Rica (CVCR).
27 on Women's Health, and Ministry of Health of Costa Rica (CVT); GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA (PATRIC
28 Over two years, in a tropical rain forest in Costa Rica (La Selva Biological Station), we recorded th
29 sites of Jicaro and La Cascabel in northwest Costa Rica (n = 9; A.D. 800-1250) and the Casas Grandes
30 were collected from 115 women and 344 men in Costa Rica after they had fasted overnight, and a dietar
31 y in the United States is 18% higher than in Costa Rica among adult men and 10% higher among middle-a
32  738 individuals, all from Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia pedigrees, participated; among
33 pulation isolates from the Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia, Colombia also identified rs786
34  isolated populations: the Central Valley of Costa Rica and Antioquia, Colombia.
35 rds Malpelo and Cocos Islands, some reaching Costa Rica and Colombia.
36 disease risk in amphibian populations across Costa Rica and eastern Australia, even after jointly con
37                            Unfortunately, in Costa Rica and elsewhere, land area inevitably decreases
38 e use long-term daily rainfall isotopes from Costa Rica and event-based sampling of Hurricanes Irma a
39  prediction using both local-scale data from Costa Rica and global analyses of over 11 000 Bd infecti
40                                              Costa Rica and Iran had the joint-highest implementation
41 reen turtles (Chelonia mydas) in Tortuguero, Costa Rica and Melbourne, Florida, USA.
42 racts of oribatid mites collected throughout Costa Rica and Panama, which represent 11 of the approxi
43 acts of protected area systems on poverty in Costa Rica and Thailand and find that although communiti
44 s suggest that the protected area systems in Costa Rica and Thailand, on average, reduced deforestati
45 ensively studied bird assemblage in southern Costa Rica as a case study, we applied the typology in t
46 tudy of nonfatal first acute MI conducted in Costa Rica between 1994 and 2004, with 1,627 case-contro
47 temala in the 1980s/1990s and to Monteverde, Costa Rica by 1987.
48 ide, we quantified bird population trends in Costa Rica by mist netting 57,255 birds of 265 species b
49 ng a three-kilometer track line at Ostional, Costa Rica during a mass-nesting event of olive ridley t
50 ified landscape in the Caribbean lowlands of Costa Rica during the dry and wet seasons to elucidate i
51 iniature acoustic tags off the east coast of Costa Rica for 83.15 min (+/- 9.12 SD) to determine thei
52 gradients in the United States compared with Costa Rica for behavioral and medical risk factors such
53  and 12% higher in the United States than in Costa Rica for men and women, respectively.
54 accine arms of an HPV-16/18 vaccine trial in Costa Rica had oral, cervical, and anal specimens collec
55          In contrast to the Ecuadorian site, Costa Rica had significantly higher canopy richness and
56        Despite this phylogenetic constraint, Costa Rica has many species; the number of salamander sp
57  active women (n=5,871) in the NCI-sponsored Costa Rica HPV Vaccine Trial's prevaccination enrollment
58 mulate these HPV-naive subcohorts within the Costa Rica HPV16/18 Vaccine Trial and assessed how these
59                Plotting the peatland area of Costa Rica in a climate space (mean annual precipitation
60 stributed throughout South America, reaching Costa Rica in Central America and are recognized by extr
61                                              Costa Rica is experiencing a fast demographic aging.
62 wn that the Nicoya Peninsula of northwestern Costa Rica is moving northwestward 11 mm a(-1) as part o
63 population-based controls (n=1819) living in Costa Rica matched for age, sex, and area of residence w
64 ol subjects from the 10,049-woman Guanacaste Costa Rica Natural History Study.
65 m in the countries of Guatemala, Panama, and Costa Rica only.
66 NHP, 13/1,370 RT-PCR-positive) in Brazil and Costa Rica over 14 years.
67  and natural-forest habitats in 4 regions of Costa Rica over a period of 18 years.
68                                              Costa Rica produced similar vaccine efficacy estimates a
69                          Recent reports from Costa Rica reveal steep cross-lineage declines of caterp
70  within a clade of the genus Bolitoglossa in Costa Rica reveals strong phylogeographic structure with
71  of antenatal Bartter's syndrome patients in Costa Rica share a single common ancestor.
72                           Our experiments in Costa Rica showed birds reduced infestation by ~ 50%, ba
73 ho participated in the Genetics of Asthma in Costa Rica Study (GACRS) were profiled for 304 miRNAs.
74 AMSE); and Genetic Epidemiology of Asthma in Costa Rica Study (GACRS).
75 3) and the Genetic Epidemiology of Asthma in Costa Rica Study (n = 1,155).
76 ith replication in the Genetics of Asthma in Costa Rica Study (P = .04).
77                    The Genetics of Asthma in Costa Rica Study and a Puerto Rico/Connecticut asthma co
78 te our findings in the Genetics of Asthma in Costa Rica Study.
79 Program (CAMP) and the Genetics of Asthma in Costa Rica Study.
80 gram; n = 560), GACRS (Genetics of Asthma in Costa Rica Study; n = 967) and HPR (Hartford-Puerto Rico
81  5 September 2012 M(w) 7.6 earthquake on the Costa Rica subduction plate boundary followed a 62-y int
82 rs of data from tropical rainforest plots in Costa Rica that range from 10 y since abandonment to old
83 5% confidence interval (CI) 0.95 to 1.10) in Costa Rica to 1.17 (1.09 to 1.25) in Chile.
84 at it is a rainforest species occurring from Costa Rica to Brazil.
85 regenerating lowland wet tropical forests in Costa Rica to document successional patterns of N fixers
86 on-based control subjects who were living in Costa Rica to examine potential gene-environment interac
87 isolated population of the Central Valley of Costa Rica to identify genes that promote susceptibility
88 e Burns, a dry forest denizen occurring from Costa Rica to Mexico, and Udranomia tomdaleyi Burns, whi
89 itrite content in processed meat products in Costa Rica to provide the first estimations of nitrite d
90 ositions of forearc and arc front springs in Costa Rica to show that the structure of the incoming pl
91 on intervals from 800 to 1100 m elevation in Costa Rica to test if bee abundance, community compositi
92 tion experiment in a tropical rain forest in Costa Rica to test the sensitivity of surface soil C poo
93 type, as derived from the control arm of the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (2004-2010).
94                             Results from the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (CVT) demonstrated partial cros
95 nts (SUCCEED) and in 2357 specimens from the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (CVT).
96                        Summary data from the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (CVT; NCT00128661) and ~the PAT
97 e report long-term follow-up results for the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial (publicly funded and initiated
98 -29 present at the 4-year study visit of the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial provided vulvar and cervical sa
99           In 2004-2005, investigators in the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial randomized 7,466 women aged 18-
100              7466 women were enrolled in the Costa Rica Vaccine Trial; 3727 received the HPV vaccine
101 these inefficiencies can be reduced in rural Costa Rica via an externally driven community monitoring
102  Canada vs US: OR, 0.11 [95% CI, 0.05-0.23]; Costa Rica vs US: OR, 1.76 [95% CI, 1.05-2.96]; Spain vs
103 , and area of residence (n = 1805) living in Costa Rica were genotyped for the PPARG Pro12Ala genetic
104                                   Women from Costa Rica were registered between June 28, 2004, and De
105 population-based controls (n=2096) living in Costa Rica were studied.
106 rom 18 forest inventory plots in Guanacaste, Costa Rica were used to determine realistic variation in
107 igate in a randomly selected population from Costa Rica whether plasma or adipose tissue concentratio
108 tive restoration and rewilding programmes in Costa Rica's Area de Conservacion Guanacaste and Mozambi
109 ellite imagery show that deforested areas of Costa Rica's Caribbean lowlands remain relatively cloud-
110                   We evaluated the impact of Costa Rica's fortification program on anemia in women ag
111 ts lowest quartile is markedly worse than in Costa Rica's lowest quartile, providing powerful evidenc
112 rent in all broad cause-of-death groups, but Costa Rica's overall mortality advantage can be explaine
113 s to evaluate the impact on deforestation of Costa Rica's renowned protected-area system between 1960
114 ttention in a literate, westernized culture (Costa Rica) in which the effects of cannabis use can be
115 -protocol cohort using TS2 (either in NCI or Costa Rica) or SPF10-LiPA25 (McNemar P values >.05).
116 on of the golden toad, Bufo periglenes, from Costa Rica).
117 c status of children treated for wheezing in Costa Rica, a country with an increased asthma burden.
118 Guanacaste and selected areas of Puntarenas, Costa Rica, age 18-25 years, in good general health, wil
119                              In northwestern Costa Rica, an approximately concordant genetic disconti
120 cal samples from a population-based study in Costa Rica, and 27 representative genomes from each majo
121 the English-speaking Caribbean and in Chile, Costa Rica, and Brazil.
122 ny, United States (Yellowstone, Salton Sea), Costa Rica, and Chile show that subsurface isotope fract
123 om the so-called 4C countries (Chile, China, Costa Rica, and Cuba) identified in The Lancet Commissio
124 aying of Mn-containing fungicide mancozeb in Costa Rica, and examined environmental and lifestyle fac
125 onusers, who had been recruited in San Jose, Costa Rica, and had been observed since 1973.
126  (LC) and La Selva (LS) Biological Stations, Costa Rica, and Kibale National Park (KNP), Uganda using
127 centers in the United States, India, Canada, Costa Rica, and Mexico between December 1999 and May 200
128 ulation-based controls from Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, and Mexico.
129 -cutter ant colonies collected in Argentina, Costa Rica, and Panama.
130 ed 3 independent cohorts from North America, Costa Rica, and Sweden for replication.
131 ession in tropical rainforests of north-east Costa Rica, and that attempts to understand this success
132  associated with warmer macroclimates across Costa Rica, and warmer microclimates within landscapes.
133 ere observed at the background site Tapanti (Costa Rica, BA), 10.8 fg/m3.
134 andomised, double-blind, controlled trial in Costa Rica, between June 28, 2004, and Dec 21, 2005, des
135 s from 12 goat populations in United States, Costa Rica, Brazil and Argentina, we evaluated the genet
136 , CUPs and OCPs were generally lower than in Costa Rica, but high concentrations of HFRs were observe
137 enrollment in 980 women from the Guanacaste, Costa Rica, cohort who were actively followed up every 6
138 ntries, including Mexico, the United States, Costa Rica, Colombia, and, to a lesser extent, Brazil.
139                            Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, and Paraguay had over 70% of modern co
140 en of childbearing age in Argentina, Brazil, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, and Paraguay provided
141                          Bangladesh, Brazil, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Kyrgyzstan, and Peru performed sign
142 l Consortium done in nine countries (Canada, Costa Rica, Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, New Z
143 st, the most developed countries, Panama and Costa Rica, had net woody vegetation gain and a more sta
144 seven Latin American sites: Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Mexico (two sites).
145 on-based cohort of 7237 women in Guanacaste, Costa Rica, in which we had previously observed a second
146 ed the impacts of protected areas in Brazil, Costa Rica, Indonesia, and Thailand on carbon storage in
147 ries including Argentina, Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Italy, New Zealand, Paraguay, Singapore, Spa
148                          In Irazu volcano in Costa Rica, magmas apparently ascend from their source r
149 even countries (Spain, Finland, Poland, USA, Costa Rica, Mexico and Korea) were studied using a multi
150 as evaluated in Australia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thai
151          Populations from Panama, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras, however, did not clu
152                           In a dry forest in Costa Rica, of 49 plant species around a third were ant-
153 sition of 1,103 species native to Panama and Costa Rica, performed character state reconstruction and
154 eeding caterpillars in the United States and Costa Rica, representing 124 species from 15 families.
155 based cohort study (n=10,049) in Guanacaste, Costa Rica, that was initiated in 1993.
156 outhern Oscillation (ENSO), at Cocos Island, Costa Rica, the site of multiple marine heatwaves.
157  to southern parts of Middle America, and in Costa Rica, there are but three.
158 hat operates in Isla del Coco National Park, Costa Rica, to (1) determine the frequency of occurrence
159  (N2) fixation was investigated at Mound 12, Costa Rica, to determine its spatial distribution and bi
160 Amazon, an area twice that of all forests in Costa Rica, to reveal the determinants of forest carbon
161 etter mortality than the highest quartile in Costa Rica, US mortality in its lowest quartile is marke
162 old-growth tropical rain forest at La Selva, Costa Rica, varied >2-fold among years.
163 control study of 10,077 women in Guanacaste, Costa Rica, was conducted.
164 ts and insects on an elevational transect in Costa Rica, we assess the potential for lowland biotic a
165   Using a well-studied tropical ecosystem in Costa Rica, we develop an empirically based model for qu
166 d-growth (SG) and old-growth (OG) forests in Costa Rica, we show that patterns of convergence between
167 based natural study conducted in Guanacaste, Costa Rica, we studied a subset of 810 initially HPV-pos
168  established in abandoned pasture in lowland Costa Rica, we used a mass-balance approach to quantify
169 o pedigrees drawn from the Central Valley of Costa Rica, where the population is largely descended fr
170 e (NCI) and transferred to the laboratory in Costa Rica, where we conducted a second validation study
171 ought in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Costa Rica, which occurred during the 2015 El Nino South
172                        All subjects lived in Costa Rica-a country that uses traditional pasture-grazi
173 onservacion Guanacaste (ACG) in northwestern Costa Rica-constitute a huge and pervasive mimicry compl
174 community dynamics of lowland rainforests in Costa Rica.
175 n in 579 parent-child trios with asthma from Costa Rica.
176 titudinal gradient of 70-2800 m elevation in Costa Rica.
177 uals within and across dialect boundaries in Costa Rica.
178 ospective study of 2500 women in Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
179 udy sites in southern Mexico, Guatemala, and Costa Rica.
180 in a cross-sectional study in 1926 adults in Costa Rica.
181 limatology in the Monteverde Cloud Forest of Costa Rica.
182 ntrol pairs with MI in the Central Valley of Costa Rica.
183 onservacion Guanacaste (ACG) in northwestern Costa Rica.
184 st important risk factors for nonfatal MI in Costa Rica.
185 se III HPV16/18 Vaccine Trial in Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
186 tively, with a papaya isolate of MCLCuV from Costa Rica.
187 to 1694 population-based control subjects in Costa Rica.
188 iration in a lowland tropical rain forest in Costa Rica.
189 nto a 10,000-woman population-based study in Costa Rica.
190  related population of the Central Valley of Costa Rica.
191  implicated by the previous studies of BP in Costa Rica.
192  children (n=655) from the Central Valley of Costa Rica.
193 -based cohort study of cervical neoplasia in Costa Rica.
194  24-year-old second-growth forest in lowland Costa Rica.
195 mmon in lower montane forests of Monteverde, Costa Rica.
196 ied in Yugoslavia in 1957, and also found in Costa Rica.
197  in a population-based case-control study in Costa Rica.
198 isolated population of the central valley of Costa Rica.
199  10% of the population in Honduras to 95% in Costa Rica.
200 re men (n = 78) and women (n = 42) living in Costa Rica.
201 cterized population of the Central Valley of Costa Rica.
202 he Middle Atlantic, the Aleutian Trench, and Costa Rica.
203  double-blind, community-based trial done in Costa Rica.
204 ands, Switzerland, Sweden, Mexico, Iran, and Costa Rica.
205 h the highest speciation rates in Panama and Costa Rica.
206 e seedlings in restoration sites in southern Costa Rica.
207 sturbance on ACD in a lowland rain forest in Costa Rica.
208 te-faced capuchin (Cebus imitator) groups in Costa Rica.
209 esearch Center, United States; and La Selva, Costa Rica.
210 tact forests at La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica.
211 c acid, in the extract of 20 wild ferns from Costa Rica.
212  an estimated total extent of 1456 km(2) for Costa Rica.
213 Rosa of the Area de Conservacion Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
214 hwestern and southeastern populations within Costa Rica.
215  population isolate of the Central Valley of Costa Rica.
216 extensively deforested landscape in southern Costa Rica.
217 crustal faults has been described in central Costa Rica.
218  forests in Area de Conservacion Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
219 (Weeks) comprises three different species in Costa Rica.
220 assessing geological hazards in northwestern Costa Rica.
221 monkeys (Cebus capucinus) in Lomas Barbudal, Costa Rica.
222  dry forest and currently is known only from Costa Rica.
223 ross land-use and precipitation gradients in Costa Rica.
224 cross populations of Dalechampia scandens in Costa Rica.
225 earch oriented toward pioneering policies in Costa Rica.
226  the fish species Poeciliopsis retropinna in Costa Rica.
227 s of rolled-leaf beetles on two mountains in Costa Rica.
228 d six times higher among women compared with Costa Rica.
229 variants and CAD risk in Hispanics living in Costa Rica.
230 encing dataset with 897 asthmatic trios from Costa Rica.
231 populations from the north Pacific region of Costa Rica.
232  genus Apterostigma found in both Panama and Costa Rica.
233 ational herpetological community of southern Costa Rica.
234  Thailand, France (Martinique), Denmark, and Costa Rica; and similar in Turkiye, Ecuador, and Belarus
235 orizonte, Brazil; Santiago, Chile; San Jose, Costa Rica; Mexico City, Mexico; and Panama City, Panama
236  changes in land use or climate in northwest Costa Rica?
237 the metabolic syndrome and its components in Costa Rican adults (n = 1879) without diabetes.
238                             We genotyped 307 Costa Rican and 515 Ashkenazi individuals (TS probands a
239  actigraphy data obtained from members of 26 Costa Rican and Colombian pedigrees [136 euthymic (i.e.,
240 s concerning the resilience and stability of Costa Rican bird communities.
241  a complete avian phylogeny with 12 years of Costa Rican bird surveys (118,127 detections across 487
242 ply our framework to quantify the payoff for Costa Rican birds of changing farm plot and border veget
243                  Using a 10-year data set on Costa Rican birds, we find that low-intensity agricultur
244 (termed BPI), and screened the genome ot two Costa Rican BPI pedigrees (McInnes et al., submitted).
245 arasites collected from a wild population of Costa Rican capuchin monkeys (Cebus imitator).
246  The 5-LO polymorphism was genotyped in 1885 Costa Rican case-control pairs and tested for associatio
247 r (BP-I), from an isolated population of the Costa Rican central valley.
248 a subset of participants from 3 large US and Costa Rican cervix studies were typed for HLA class I al
249 ed with total IgE in 420 nuclear families of Costa Rican children with asthma.
250 n on par with the average annual income of a Costa Rican citizen.
251       Coconut water was extracted from young Costa Rican coconuts and heat treated to emulate pasteur
252 trol, via a factorial field experiment in 30 Costa Rican coffee farms.
253  replication analysis in 584 children from a Costa Rican cohort.
254                     Although unlikely in the Costa Rican context, other explanations cannot be exclud
255 in1 (MmTX1) and MmTX2, two toxins present in Costa Rican coral snake venom that tightly bind to GABAA
256                                              Costa Rican countryside habitats, especially those with
257         Volatiles of papaya purees from four Costa Rican cultivars were analysed by solid-phase micro
258 ods, the authors derived dietary patterns in Costa Rican data collected on 3,574 cases and controls i
259 r BMI was performed on 657 subjects in eight Costa Rican families enrolled in a study of asthma.
260 evious genome-screening linkage study of two Costa Rican families had suggested a BP-I locus on this
261 terval to reveal a core haplotype, shared in Costa Rican families with vLINCL but not in a Venezuelan
262 dertaken in an expanded set of Colombian and Costa Rican families; this provided a genome-wide signif
263 deletion encompassing exons 3-6 of AMTN in a Costa Rican family segregating dominant hypomineralised
264 o collect functional brain imaging data from Costa Rican farm workers enrolled in an epidemiological
265                   Three hundred thirty-eight Costa Rican farm workers from banana, coffee, and palm o
266 to approximately 60,000 USD per year for one Costa Rican farm.
267 eleased from the slab and mantle beneath the Costa Rican forearc is sequestered within the crust by c
268  An elegant field experiment shows that some Costa Rican forest birds will use 'riparian' (river marg
269         The potential therapeutic effects of Costa Rican guava (Psidium friedrichsthalianum) extracts
270 compounds are reported for the first time in Costa Rican guava.
271 n in exon 3, introducing a stop codon on the Costa Rican haplotype, and a codon deletion in exon 5, e
272 ion of LC n-3 PUFAs with nonfatal MI risk in Costa Rican Hispanics.We analyzed cross-sectional data f
273 e of a novel variant during an outbreak in a Costa Rican hospital that was associated with severe cli
274 eviously published genome-screen data from a Costa Rican kindred segregating for severe bipolar disor
275 rineural progressive hearing loss in a large Costa Rican kindred was previously localized to chromoso
276                                              Costa Rican men (n = 99) and women (n = 101) completed a
277                                 In contrast, Costa Rican N2/He ratios are low (maximum 1483) and delt
278 tourists value, but not species discussed in Costa Rican newspapers.
279    Association studies were conducted in 415 Costa Rican parent-child trios and 493 trios participati
280                               A cohort of 20 Costa Rican patients with a congenital syndrome that bea
281 evious study of nucleotide polymorphism in a Costa Rican population of Drosophila melanogaster found
282     An analysis of nucleotide variation in a Costa Rican population sample of standard and inverted c
283  are also observed in an ethnically distinct Costa Rican population, but age and smoking are importan
284 ated with habitual caffeine consumption in a Costa Rican population.
285 the patient sample from those of the general Costa Rican population.
286 duction associated with the establishment of Costa Rican protected areas is causally attributable to
287 hronosequence and among species in a diverse Costa Rican rain forest.
288  partitions to assess species diversity in a Costa Rican rainforest butterfly community.
289       Our results suggest that a traditional Costa Rican rural dietary pattern is associated with low
290  evaluated against 5 yr of field data from a Costa Rican SDTF site and remote-sensing data over Centr
291 le pioneer tree, Vochysia ferruginea, at two Costa Rican sites.
292 overlying forearc crustal materials into the Costa Rican subduction zone, releasing fluids with light
293 r 1998 compared with non-ENSO year 2000 in a Costa Rican tropical rainforest.
294 ra macroloba (Fabaceae), an abundant tree in Costa Rican wet forests.
295  of populations, this allele is absent among Costa Ricans and New Guinea highlanders.
296                                              Costa Ricans follow a staple dietary pattern that includ
297 e risk (PAR) for major MI risk factors among Costa Ricans without a history of diabetes, hypertension
298 ted with plasma lipids and the risk of MI in Costa Ricans, a population with a low intake of wine.
299                        With the exception of Costa Ricans, most people with HIV infection in Central
300 ed with lower all-cause mortality in elderly Costa Ricans.

 
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