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1 le with standard microscope slides and cover glasses.
2 istance - is a common alternative to reading glasses.
3 s to predict the Young's modulus of silicate glasses.
4  results in thermally and kinetically stable glasses.
5  aesthetic advantages by using tooth-colored glasses.
6  ranging from poorly annealed to ultrastable glasses.
7 mogenic helium dating assumptions in natural glasses.
8 liquid influences the ability to form stable glasses.
9 Ls and monofocal IOLs, and the disutility of glasses.
10  with moderate to high hyperopia, 17.6% wore glasses.
11 r difference between polymeric and colloidal glasses.
12 cular dynamics simulations of model metallic glasses.
13 g regime relevant for granular and colloidal glasses.
14 ly less reddish immediately upon donning the glasses.
15 ractical viable method to join bulk metallic glasses.
16 , akin to the ones in supercooled liquids or glasses.
17 deo microscopy data of hard-sphere colloidal glasses.
18  to traditional metallic, organic, and oxide glasses.
19 havior for typical lanthanide based metallic glasses.
20 rcooled liquid is shown by the 85Al and 84Al glasses.
21 tope compositions measured in both trinitite glasses.
22 ion and 107 (11.9%) only needed prescription glasses.
23 ar materials to those of thermally activated glasses.
24 ms the unique configurational state of these glasses.
25 -density, high-hardness bulk aluminosilicate glasses.
26  to the relaxation, flow, and deformation of glasses.
27              Use of bifocal or single-vision glasses.
28 er key for accelerated discovery of metallic glasses.
29 on (ZVI) powders and other Fe-based metallic glasses.
30 tially improve the photostability of organic glasses.
31  nature of the short-range order in Cu64Zr36 glasses.
32 to that of many ductile metallic and organic glasses.
33 nd could help design metal-organic framework glasses.
34 artly explain reduced consumption from these glasses.
35  transparent polymers, silica- and soda-lime glasses.
36  and that most problems could be solved with glasses.
37 0.05-0.17]) for children not pretreated with glasses (1 RCT, 177 participants).
38       Participants were randomly assigned to glasses (1.00 D less than full cycloplegic hyperopia) ve
39 is wider than that of most existing metallic glasses(12).
40 r 5 to 12 weeks for children pretreated with glasses (2 RCTs, 240 participants); more children treate
41              The most frequent outcomes were glasses (346) or follow-up (209), but types of treatment
42 idual amblyopia (no current treatment except glasses), 48 visually normal controls without glasses, a
43  either eye correctly predicted the need for glasses 93% of the time; increasing this cutoff to >=1.5
44 n forms the basis for the design of metallic glasses, a source of diverse magnetic phenomena, and a r
45 residual amblyopia than for controls without glasses across all domains: Child PedEyeQ greatest mean
46 isorption experiments establish that the ZIF glasses adsorb technologically relevant C(3) and C(4) hy
47 perties thought to be equivalent to those of glasses aged for thousands of years.
48 ic stability comparable to those of ordinary glasses aged for thousands of years.
49 ols without glasses, and 19 controls wearing glasses (aged 8-11 years) completed the Child 5-11 year
50 city breaking takes place in mean-field spin glasses aging dynamics which, asymptotically, takes plac
51 he vibrational density of states D(omega) of glasses allow one to rationalize their peculiar low-temp
52 ally based constitutive descriptions for the glasses allowing design of safer, composite panels by co
53                                              Glasses alone improved visual acuity by less than 1 line
54 ccurred in 29% (95% CI: 19%-43%) assigned to glasses and 27% (95% CI: 17%-42%) assigned to observatio
55 e a theoretical proof of concept for perfect glasses and broaden our fundamental understanding of gla
56 pores in filtration membranes, to nanoporous glasses and carbon nanotubes.
57         While nanoelements may be added into glasses and ceramics to form nanocomposites with enhance
58 nce interval [CI]: 4%-26%) of 41 assigned to glasses and four (9%; 95% CI: 3%-22%) of 43 assigned to
59 rystals, as well as amorphous phases such as glasses and gels.
60 hermodynamics of polyamorphic transitions in glasses and glass-forming liquids.
61 ime evolution of avalanches in bulk metallic glasses and granular materials, we uncover a regime of u
62 ntal role in the physics of glasses and spin glasses and in other applications (e.g., in algorithms m
63 mical bonds of similar strengths in basaltic glasses and iron-rich alloys, even at high pressure.
64   The X-ray diffraction patterns of silicate glasses and liquids reveal similar characteristics over
65                          In alumino-silicate glasses and melts, extensively used in industry and repr
66  making this a universal phenomenon of oxide glasses and melts.
67              Aqueous dissolution of silicate glasses and minerals plays a critical role in global bio
68 n isotopic compositions of hydrated volcanic glasses and modern stream waters to determine late Cenoz
69 ew optic devices - singly-doped luminescence glasses and nanoparticle-coated lenses that convert UV l
70 asses phase (18 weeks) and a patching phase (glasses and occlusion for 10 hours per day for 12 weeks)
71 the observational window into the physics of glasses and reinforce the relevance of an entropy crisis
72  identify structural properties of quiescent glasses and relate them to glassy dynamics.
73 Janus II, we study the Mpemba effect in spin glasses and show that it is a nonequilibrium process, go
74 nd play a fundamental role in the physics of glasses and spin glasses and in other applications (e.g.
75 eity scenario considered for the dynamics of glasses and supercooled liquids.
76 e design of iridium/nickel/tantalum metallic glasses (and others also containing boron) with a glass
77 lasses), 48 visually normal controls without glasses, and 19 controls wearing glasses (aged 8-11 year
78 as augmented reality devices, smart surgical glasses, and smart windows.
79 e different in Egyptian and Levantine natron glasses, and that Sb Roman glass is Egyptian.
80                                              Glasses are amorphous solids, which do not possess the l
81                                        Oxide glasses are an integral part of the modern world, but th
82 -11), but the mechanical properties of these glasses are critically dependent on the glass transition
83                                     Metallic glasses are disordered materials that offer the unique a
84 analogous to conventional plastics, metallic glasses are emerging as a modern engineering material.
85                                     Metallic glasses are expected to have quite tunable structures in
86                      Density and hardness of glasses are known to increase upon both compression at t
87                                              Glasses are often described as supercooled liquids, whos
88 d spectroscopic measurements show that these glasses are optically transparent up to 25 mum, making t
89                            Zr-based metallic glasses are prepared by quenching supercooled liquid und
90                                              Glasses are promising electrolytes for use in solid-stat
91                   The High Pressure Quenched glasses are stable in ambient conditions after decompres
92                                        These glasses are stable in ambient conditions after decompres
93                                        While glasses are ubiquitous in natural and manufactured mater
94 es containing lead, also called lead crystal glasses, are commonly used as food product containers, i
95 our decades long studies of Pd-Ni-P metallic glasses, arguably the best glass-forming alloys.
96         The sophisticated colors of medieval glasses arise from their transition metal (TM) impuritie
97 y, Sb2S3 single crystals are grown in Sb-S-I glasses as an example of this approach.
98 ight into the structural changes of silicate glasses as analogue materials for silicate melts at ultr
99 ble phonon dynamics on demand and the use of glasses as low-loss phononic media.
100 f optical or electronic magnification in the glasses as well as smaller pixels in future implants may
101 nding in metal alloys (Fe-N) and in silicate glasses (as molecular N(2) and NH complexes).
102 ht on the properties of vapor-deposited a-Se glasses at a range of substrate temperatures and deposit
103 t baseline and had LASIK, and 287 (16%) wore glasses at baseline and had LASIK.
104 rred when blinks were simulated with shutter glasses at random time points or actively triggered by o
105 ssure torsion in nanoscale Cu50Zr50 metallic glasses at room temperature.
106                                     Metallic glasses attract considerable interest due to their uniqu
107   Since their discovery in 1960(1), metallic glasses based on a wide range of elements have been deve
108                                Bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) and nanocrystalline metals (NMs) have bee
109                     The use of bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) as the flexspline in strain wave gears (S
110            The plastic flow of bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) is characterized by intermittent bursts o
111 od to enhance the ductility in bulk metallic glasses (BMGs), the introduction of geometric constraint
112 igh-strength, high-temperature bulk metallic glasses, bodes well for enabling the discovery of other
113 hanisms of high-pressure torsion in metallic glasses, but also leads to higher stresses and homogeneo
114 izable chemical strategy for making such MOF glasses by assembly from viscous solutions of metal node
115 es granular, colloidal, atomic and molecular glasses by changing the temperature and density.
116  that mechanism in the case of hard particle glasses by examining the glass transition in an extended
117 erent in measuring the long time behavior of glasses by instead focusing on the very short time dynam
118 vis, and X-band EPR spectroscopy and in MTHF glasses by W-band EPR and Q-band ENDOR spectroscopy.
119                In this paper we show how MOF glasses can be combined with inorganic glasses in order
120                            Complex states in glasses can be neatly expressed by the potential energy
121                                Bulk metallic glasses can exhibit strength and elasticity surpassing t
122 -quenched zeolitic imidazole framework (ZIF) glasses can provide insights into their glass-formation
123 t or no benefit of immediate prescription of glasses compared with careful observation (with glasses
124 es of a range of thiol-anhydride elastomers, glasses, composites and photopolymers are discussed.
125                        These data imply that glasses containing complex anions, and in which covalent
126                                     Silicate glasses containing lead, also called lead crystal glasse
127 r gold electrodes and transparent conducting glasses could reduce the price per watt of perovskite ph
128 windows and in the arts, but the oxide-based glasses currently used in most of these applications suf
129 shear bands of the type observed in metallic glasses deforming under mechanical stress.
130       Owing to their glassy nature, metallic glasses demonstrate a toughness that is extremely sensit
131  discuss the role of connectivity in polymer glasses, demonstrating that although covalent bonding pr
132                                  Compared to glasses deposited in the dark, stable a-Se glasses forme
133 nnealers to sample the ground-states of spin glasses differently than thermal samplers.
134 while creating mechanically stable amorphous glasses down to absolute zero temperature.
135 ich is even lower than that of brittle oxide glasses due to the preferential breakage of the weak coo
136 ropagation of individual defects in metallic glasses during deformation at the nanoscale.
137 ral evolution in nanoscale Cu50Zr50 metallic glasses during high-pressure torsion is investigated usi
138 ace mobility is critical in producing stable glasses during physical vapor deposition.
139 sm for decreased consumption, straight-sided glasses elicited more 'pursed' lip embouchures, which ma
140                             We find that all glasses evolve in a very rough energy landscape, with a
141                             Our Ir-Ni-Ta-(B) glasses exhibit high strength at high temperatures compa
142                                        These glasses exhibit higher density, hardness, elastic modulu
143  as core-shell particles or inverse photonic glasses-explaining recent experimental findings reportin
144              It is now well established that glasses feature quasilocalized nonphononic excitations-c
145                      Metal-organic framework glasses feature unique thermal, structural, and chemical
146 hus demonstrating the potential of these ZIF glasses for applications in gas separation.
147             Eleven observers wore bright red glasses for five 1-hr periods per day, for 5 days.
148 ve on hospital surfaces (e.g. privacy window glasses) for up to 5 months.
149                                              Glasses formed by physical vapor deposition (PVD) are an
150                                        While glasses formed by quenching the molten states of inorgan
151 o glasses deposited in the dark, stable a-Se glasses formed under white light have reduced thermal st
152 rol over the structure and properties of PVD glasses formed with different types of glass-forming mol
153 , some isolated imports of Islamic plant ash glasses from Mesopotamia, and, most notably, the develop
154                                       Porous glasses from metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) represent a
155 that are compositionally related to the lead glasses from Saqunda.
156 ransient force balance is what distinguishes glasses from supercooled liquids.
157 ndings and show for the first time, based on glasses from the ancient city of Gerasa, that hafnium (H
158 n, failure occurred in 11 (21%) of 53 in the glasses group and 18 (34%) of 53 in the observation grou
159 rvation group and 34% (95% CI, 23-48) in the glasses group met deterioration criteria (requiring glas
160                   The High Pressure Quenched glasses have a distinct structure and properties.
161                Metal-organic framework (MOF) glasses have become a subject of interest as a distinct
162  shear band arrangements in notched metallic glasses have been extensively carried out, but a systema
163                                     Metallic glasses have recently shown promising performance and la
164 kening and inertial effects in bulk metallic glasses have strikingly similar effects on the slip dyna
165 ucture, referred to as High-Entropy Metallic Glasses (HEMGs), provide tunable catalytic performance b
166 cation and utilization of nanoscale metallic glasses, however, remain unresolved.
167 tionations between metal alloys and silicate glasses, i.e., from -257 +/- 22 per mille to -49 +/- 1 p
168  group met deterioration criteria (requiring glasses if not wearing).
169                                Patching plus glasses improved visual acuity by about 1 line after 1 y
170  between diaries and monitored times wearing glasses in adults was high (intraclass correlation coeff
171 w MOF glasses can be combined with inorganic glasses in order to fabricate a new family of materials
172 m number theory applied to the study of spin glasses in physics that inspired early neural network th
173 ation group analysis of disordered models of glasses, in particular of the spin models at the origin
174 erstanding the thermal stability of metallic glasses is critical to determining their safe temperatur
175 ation on the shock response of bulk metallic glasses is examined by conducting experiments on two iro
176 eous elastoplastic deformation of structural glasses is explored using the framework of the random fi
177 the dynamic properties of silicate melts and glasses is fundamental to both Earth and Materials Scien
178 ctively modulating the structure of metallic glasses is rather difficult.
179 plied, the fracture toughness of traditional glasses is still very low due to intrinsic brittleness,
180 h in crystals and the Allen-Feldman model in glasses, leveraging interatomic force constants and norm
181 ipants also described personal barriers (eg, glasses, long hair); however, some PPE designs helped mi
182 ngs suggest that switching to straight-sided glasses may be one intervention contributing to the many
183          The binding energy for the metallic glasses, measured using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
184 ith referrals made as needed for refraction (glasses measurement) and cataract surgery to CBBSH.
185 s to all tested surfaces including plastics, glasses, metals and biological materials.
186                                When metallic glasses (MGs) are subjected to mechanical loads, the pla
187      High-entropy alloys (HEAs) and metallic glasses (MGs) are two material classes based on the mass
188 responses of neutron irradiation in metallic glasses (MGs) have been investigated by making a series
189  The glass forming ability (GFA) of metallic glasses (MGs) is quantified by the critical cooling rate
190 t room temperature, plastic flow of metallic glasses (MGs) is sharply localized in shear bands, which
191                                     Metallic glasses (MGs) lack the crystallinity of conventional eng
192 relating the amorphous structure in metallic glasses (MGs) with their physical properties has been a
193                                 All metallic glasses (MGs), irrespective of their compositions, becom
194 ghness variability observed between metallic glasses (MGs), we examine the origin of fracture toughne
195 ctal models of packing structure in metallic glasses (MGs).
196                           Reliability of the glasses monitors was assessed by comparing diary entries
197                                Patients wore glasses mounted with a small camera and a video processo
198 tuation electron microscopy of bulk metallic glasses of CuZrAl(Ag) demonstrates that medium-range ord
199 (CI): 2.42, 3.21) in women who consumed >/=3 glasses of milk/day and <1 serving/day of fruit/vegetabl
200 s and either did or did not drink two 150 ml glasses of water during that time.
201                Micro- and nanoscale metallic glasses offer exciting opportunities for both fundamenta
202 sses compared with careful observation (with glasses only if deteriorated).
203 reate 3D visual content without the need for glasses or additional instrumentation.
204         Tb(3+) or Eu(3+) singly-doped borate glasses or CdS-quantum dot (CdS-QD) coated lenses effici
205 rate to high myopia and difficulties wearing glasses or contact lenses.
206 resnel prism, clear prism (incorporated into glasses or loose prism in the office), iseikonic manipul
207       Disordered systems like liquids, gels, glasses, or granular materials are not only ubiquitous i
208   The proportion of patients never requiring glasses overall was superior for TFNT00 versus SN60AT (8
209 (P < .0001), and trouble seeing when wearing glasses (P < .0001).
210 al question in the study of vapour-deposited glasses, particularly in light of new knowledge regardin
211               Compared with controls wearing glasses, PedEyeQ scores were lower for residual amblyopi
212    Deterioration prior to 3 years (requiring glasses per protocol) occurred in 29% (95% CI: 19%-43%)
213                     The study consisted of a glasses phase (18 weeks) and a patching phase (glasses a
214  and percentage improvement in VA during the glasses phase (r = 0.462; P = .003).
215  associated with improvement in VA after the glasses phase and explained 42% of the variability (F3,3
216 er MOF nanosheets, amorphous MOF liquids and glasses, polymers, metal nanoparticles, metal carbide na
217                        The replica theory of glasses predicts that in the infinite dimensional mean f
218            We characterized Al-doped sol-gel glasses, prepared at different sintering temperature, us
219 assigned to glasses versus observation (with glasses prescribed if deteriorated for subnormal distanc
220 but low failure rates suggest that immediate glasses prescription for these children may not be neede
221 dy was unable to determine whether immediate glasses prescription reduces failure rate, but low failu
222               Only 26% (n = 25) had received glasses priorly.
223 Possible advantages and applications for MOF glasses produced by utilizing the tunable chemistry of t
224                              These molecular glasses produced physically translucent and amorphous fe
225 ally identical to those observed in ordinary glasses, provided the two are compared at the same inher
226                 The order in the centrifuged glasses reflects the ground state order in the dispersio
227 history dependence of the relaxation time in glasses requires knowledge only of the softness in addit
228                                      Fishing glasses should be worn not only for UV protection, but a
229  effect, including silicon, germanium, gold, glasses, silk, polystyrene, biodegradable polymers and i
230  capability among all Fe-based bulk metallic glasses so far reported.
231 f Teflon, polyethylene, or one of two porous glasses sold under the brand names CoralPor and Electro-
232 d it establishes a direct connection between glasses' stability and their soft vibrational modes.
233 nsumption of soft drinks served in different glasses (straight-sided vs. outward-sloped), using disti
234 the widely used assumption that the silicate glasses studies are appropriate structural analogs for u
235      Identifying heterogeneous structures in glasses-such as localized soft spots-and understanding s
236 olor vision after only a few days of wearing glasses that boost color contrasts, potentially because
237 Cu content alloys are definitive examples of glasses that exhibit first-order melting.
238 ables the formation of protein-OSC-trehalose glasses that fix the proteins in their folded states und
239  been restricted to studying poorly annealed glasses that may not be relevant to experiments.
240  same universality class as high-dimensional glasses, the spherical perceptron, suggests that there e
241 er densities describing atomic and molecular glasses, the system crosses over to a regime dominated b
242                      In the case of metallic glasses, this general behavior across different temperat
243 tructure and hence the stability of metallic glasses through heat treatment.
244 act]) OR Spectacles [Title/Abstract]) OR Eye Glasses [Title/Abstract])) AND ((((Child [Title/Abstract
245  wide-ranging technologies, from windows and glasses to cameras, digital displays and photonic device
246                         "Designing" metallic glasses to exhibit properties beyond those offered withi
247 paper, we use the test case of bulk metallic glasses to highlight the key issues in the field of high
248                          In an RCT comparing glasses to observation for moderately hyperopic 3- to 5-
249 splay system for insects, using miniature 3D glasses to present separate images to each eye, and test
250  in Hf isotopes of Egyptian versus Levantine glasses to sorting of zircons in Nile sediments during l
251 t levels of smectic order in vapor-deposited glasses to suit various applications.
252 ure, extending accessible states of metallic glasses to unexplored configuration spaces.
253 frared spectroscopy (fNIRS) and eye-tracking glasses, to examine the neural systems linked to pupil d
254 el, a recurrent neural network based on spin glasses, to model the dynamics of cell cycle in HeLa (hu
255 observe nucleation of median cracks in oxide glasses under indentation.
256 orphism and structural evolution in metallic glasses under pressure.
257 roaching the glass transition, bulk metallic glasses undergo plastic flow, resulting in a substantial
258 on of glasses versus (2) observation without glasses unless reduced distance visual acuity (VA), redu
259 significantly increased relative to baseline glasses use, consistent with many glasses users having t
260 o baseline glasses use, consistent with many glasses users having tried and abandoned contact lenses
261 s among former contact lens users and former glasses users.
262 h pixels convert images projected from video glasses using near-infrared light into electric current
263 irectly detected short-range disorder in ZIF glasses using ultrahigh-field zinc-67 solid-state nuclea
264 which is usually observed for hot compressed glasses, vanishes for samples previously subjected to hi
265 -old children: (1) immediate prescription of glasses versus (2) observation without glasses unless re
266 herical equivalent were randomly assigned to glasses versus observation (with glasses prescribed if d
267 rs sample the ground-state manifolds of spin glasses very differently than thermal optimizers (ii) th
268 developed Pt-, Pd-, and Pt/Pd-based metallic glasses was evaluated in this study using scanning elect
269           The work function for the metallic glasses was lower by 75 mV to 175 mV compared to pure Pt
270 on eye tracking and dedicated full occlusion glasses, was developed to provide a fast, objective, and
271 stems - granular materials and bulk metallic glasses - we show evidence that not only the statistics
272  and less reddish during the 1-hr periods of glasses wear.
273 ormer contact lens wearers and 77% of former glasses wearers were strongly satisfied with LASIK at ye
274 a (beta = -0.347; P = .02), and adherence to glasses wearing (beta = 0.287; P = .04) were independent
275     Main Outcomes and Measures: Adherence to glasses wearing (hours per day) and effect on VA.
276 tablish the association between adherence to glasses wearing and improvement in visual acuity (VA) af
277                 A strong correlation between glasses wearing and occlusion adherence was observed (r
278       Interventions: Objective monitoring of glasses wearing and occlusion.
279 orrelation was observed between adherence to glasses wearing and percentage improvement in VA during
280 vance: The results suggest that adherence to glasses wearing is less than optimal and highly variable
281            However, the role of adherence to glasses wearing is unknown.
282  errors, type of amblyopia, and adherence to glasses wearing on improvement in VA.
283 ility of objectively monitoring adherence to glasses wearing using age-based norms, establish the ass
284                     Median (SD) adherence to glasses wearing was 70% (25.3%).
285 ] years; 10 boys and 10 girls), adherence to glasses wearing was successfully monitored in all but 1
286     Optically transparent and stable organic glasses were prepared from these materials using a bulk
287                                              Glasses were prescribed for 740 (74%) of those examined.
288                                              Glasses were prescribed to those assigned to observation
289 geneous ionic solids such as alkali silicate glasses when subjected even to moderate fields (~100 V/c
290                   Here, we study hard-sphere glasses which either crystallize or age depending on the
291 ls, such as vanadium dioxide or chalcogenide glasses, which exhibit memory behaviour with respect to
292 factor of 3 the fracture toughness of common glasses, while keeping flexural strengths comparable to
293                          This process yields glasses with 300 m(2)/g internal surface area (obtained
294                                 We show that glasses with aligned smectic liquid crystal-like order c
295 hod yields well-ordered and uniform metallic glasses with controllable feature sizes down to a few te
296                                Bulk metallic glasses with glass transition temperatures greater than
297 toisomerization reaction, also indicate that glasses with higher density have substantially increased
298 re we report on D(omega) of zero-temperature glasses with kinetic stabilities ranging from poorly ann
299 g, m and tauX* for a broad range of metallic glasses with widely varying tauX*.
300 uld now be as pointless as searching for the glasses you are wearing.

 
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