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1 of ongoing action (e.g., of walking into the street).
2 t people (ie, self, partner, or passersby on street).
3 91% were socially isolated, and 69% lived in street.
4 merican anti-capitalist movement Occupy Wall Street.
5 merican anticapitalist movement, Occupy Wall Street.
6  progenitors are thought to follow a one-way street.
7 se in the number of discarded needles on the street.
8 nses were attenuated after walking on Oxford Street.
9 rinking water based on residence in specific streets.
10 al acuity necessary for navigating rooms and streets.
11 ghways, uphill urban streets, and flat urban streets.
12 ere 40-100% larger than those of low-traffic streets.
13 struck by a motor vehicle while crossing the street; 564 control sites were other nearby crossings th
14  of street heroin use (primary), days of any street-acquired opioids in the prior 30 days (noninferio
15 d (CMS) were obtained to identify the office street addresses of Oklahoma ophthalmologists and optome
16 roved asthma self-management; acquisition of street and fire safety skills; and sexual abstinence.
17  containing predictor terms for year, month, street and population densities, and distance to the nea
18 tic social observation to independently rate street and sidewalk quality in the block surrounding eac
19 levels after riding on high-traffic arterial streets and on a path through a high-exposure industrial
20 Previous studies indicate that the design of streets and sidewalks can influence physical activity am
21             Although individuals can walk on streets and sidewalks, walking loops in parks offer a se
22 d in places with policies to promote gridded streets and similar New Urbanist design principles.
23 cing P movement from vegetated landscapes to streets and storm drains.
24 ries and driving speed limits of every road, street, and highway in the United States from the OpenSt
25 y after the events, residence south of Canal Street, and loss of possessions due to the events.
26 ldest fauna, from the Blue Lias Formation of Street, and nearby localities, in Somerset, UK (Earliest
27 uphill highways, flat highways, uphill urban streets, and flat urban streets.
28            Newer drugs make their way to the streets, and older drugs are rediscovered.
29                       Cocktail parties, busy streets, and other noisy environments pose a difficult c
30  better able to recognize friends across the street (AOR, 1.07) and had no difficulty reading printed
31  better able to recognize friends across the street (AOR, 1.71) and had no difficulty reading printed
32  within the existing network) and expansion (streets are added at the margin of the network) and a gr
33 work indicates growth through densification (streets are added within the existing network) and expan
34 ines claimed that corpses thrown into Syrian streets are causing cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) outbrea
35 K), here we show that, specifically when new streets are entered during navigation of the city, right
36 ave lower orientation/length entropies - the streets are more tightly ordered and form denser network
37                                           If streets are shown to be barriers to disease vectors, cit
38 al disorder measure constructed from virtual street audit data.
39                                      Virtual street audits are a novel method for assessing neighborh
40 "easy come, slow go," rather than a "one-way street." Based on a mathematic model of operon gains and
41  waist- and knee-deep waters at Chicago 63rd Street Beach, an embayed, tideless, freshwater beach wit
42  analyses, multiple features of Philadelphia streets, buildings, and natural surroundings were associ
43 environmental neighborhood features, such as streets, buildings, and natural surroundings, and severe
44 negative at baseline were recruited from the streets by project outreach workers in three cities in s
45                                              Street canopy exerted opposing effects on loading, where
46 ined through action at the scale of a single street canyon or across city-sized areas of canyons.
47 e that rapid chemical processes occur in the street canyon with production of secondary particles fro
48 de environment, 2.6.10(15) (kgfuel)(-1) in a street canyon, and 2.9.10(15) (kgfuel)(-1) in an on-road
49 lebone Road), which well represents an urban street canyon.
50 d with measurements likely due to effects of street canyons and nonhighway particle sources.
51  deposition by the planting of vegetation in street canyons can reduce street-level concentrations in
52 rsion environment close to the source (e.g., street canyons, position and dimensions of buildings, ro
53 ically the enhanced residence time of air in street canyons.
54 nsity was objectively assessed within a 1 km street catchment of a participant's residence.
55          Leaves have been collected close to streets characterized by heavy traffic and within urban
56                                     They and street children are more likely to be moderately-severel
57  strategy was used to search the databases: "street children" OR "street youth" OR "homeless youth" O
58 ngs that were matched to case sites based on street classification.
59 measures have been proposed such as improved street cleaning and the use of dust suppressants.
60 .52-10.50; p<0.05) after walking down Oxford Street compared with Hyde Park.
61  logistic regression, the authors found that street conditions had no effect on outdoor mobility amon
62  characteristics varied from 3.45 (fair/poor street conditions) to 2.01 (fair/poor noise level).
63 deposition of nutrient-rich leaf litter onto streets connected to storm drains.
64                                          The street-connected children and youth who provided reasons
65 nger, (2) participants met our definition of street-connected children and youth, and (3) the quantit
66 ons, the number of walking destinations, and street connectivity over time were associated with great
67 cial destinations, walking destinations, and street connectivity were associated with greater increas
68 use, number of destinations, bus access, and street connectivity) were created using geographic infor
69 ood walkability (especially land-use mix and street connectivity), local access to public transit sto
70 ed residential density, land use mix-access, street connectivity, aesthetics, and safety.
71 ly related to perceived land use mix-access, street connectivity, infrastructure, aesthetics, safety,
72 ese results demonstrate that vegetation near streets contributes substantially to stormwater nutrient
73 estrians were accurate and reliable in their street crossing decision-making ability when using eithe
74                  Accuracy and reliability in street crossing decision-making were calculated for each
75 eliable (P > 0.05) but inaccurate with their street crossing decisions (P < 0.05).
76 d pedestrians can make accurate and reliable street crossing decisions like those of normally sighted
77  subjects were the least accurate with their street crossing decisions under the hearing only conditi
78 ly impaired, and blind pedestrians at making street crossing decisions using visual and/or auditory i
79                   Significant differences in street-crossing accuracy were found as a function of age
80                                              Street-crossing decision accuracy was computed for each
81 calculating the discriminability (d') of the street-crossing decision variable for all gap pairs and
82                                              Street-crossing decision-making precision was computed a
83 ound that all subjects were precise in their street-crossing decisions (P = 0.55).
84                                              Street-crossing decisions in 13 AMD subjects, and 20 you
85                    We determined whether the street-crossing decisions of subjects with age-related m
86 antly affected a subject's accuracy in their street-crossing decisions.
87 significantly a subject's precision in their street-crossing decisions.
88 lly-sighted subjects made the least accurate street-crossing decisions.
89               A total of 282 case sites were street-crossing locations at an intersection where a ped
90 ear function (t(COG)) and subjects' measured street-crossing time.
91  retention, these urban watersheds have high street density that enhanced transport of P-rich materia
92               Once laid down, the pattern of streets determines urban form and the level of sprawl fo
93 esian ridgebacks, and Salukis), Puerto Rican street dogs, and mixed breed dogs from the United States
94 ministration of 48 mg of cocaine (a typical "street" dose) on the occupancy of dopamine 2 receptors i
95                                          The street drug "bath salts" are psychoactive mixtures of ca
96 ne use was detected, associated with a cheap street drug called ''sisa'' (related to marginal conduct
97 ond-generation' analogs have appeared in the street drug marketplace, including 4-methyl-N-ethylcathi
98 zygous form is strongly associated with both street drug use and problem drug/alcohol use.
99 s of side effects, and history of alcohol or street-drug abuse.
100 ved mortality showed that intoxications with street drugs and "other toxins" have a significant highe
101 icularly with the increasing availability of street drugs and increasing accessibility to prescriptio
102                                              Street drugs had the highest mortality 2 years after ICU
103 ol(s), 2) analgesics, 3) antidepressants, 4) street drugs, 5) sedatives, 6) poisoning (carbon monoxid
104 se of alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, and other street drugs.
105 obacco, followed by marijuana and then other street drugs.
106 l activity reflects global properties of the street entered.
107 eds and strongly related to tree canopy over streets, especially for phosphorus.
108                 This has opened up a two-way street for academic researchers to go to work in industr
109  vision were measured along an un-signalized street for nine different gap times.
110 otographs and line drawings of beaches, city streets, forests, highways, mountains, and offices.
111 no difficulty recognizing friends across the street (general population AOR, 1.24 [95% CI, 1.22-1.26]
112 s source by studying decomposition in lawns, street gutters, and catch basins during two winters.
113           Most precarious patients living in street have a higher mortality rate.
114      Over the last two decades, however, new streets have become significantly more connected and gri
115  older attending their first visit at Thomas Street Health Center in Houston, Texas, between 1/1/2003
116 nd the proportion of urinalyses positive for street heroin markers (margin, 10% of the observed rate
117 me was 50% or more of negative specimens for street heroin on weekly urinalysis during weeks 14-26.
118 ment (>or=6 months), but continued to inject street heroin regularly (>or=50% of days in preceding 3
119 e heroin leads to significantly lower use of street heroin than does supervised injectable methadone
120 efficacy outcomes were self-reported days of street heroin use (primary), days of any street-acquired
121  analysis (-1.44; 90% CI, -3.22 to 0.27) for street heroin use, although the margin of 4 days was not
122 etralogy of Fallot patients and Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH), London, United Kingdom (UK) medi
123 Center Ethics Committee and the Great Ormond Street Hospital Ethics Committee; both committees waived
124                     Consecutive Great Ormond Street Hospital patients with first AIS were identified
125 NG: Moorfields Eye Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital, London (United Kingdom).
126 ho underwent hemispherectomy at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, between 1991 and 1997.
127 iatric ophthalmology clinics at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, during 1 week in August 2001.
128                                 The "one-way street" hypothesis asserts that once formed by chance, o
129   Among respondents who lived south of Canal Street (i.e., near the World Trade Center), the prevalen
130 rement platform and repeatedly sampled every street in a 30-km(2) area of Oakland, CA, developing the
131 g to do a 2 h walk either along a commercial street in London (Oxford Street) or in an urban park (Hy
132 ative sample of adults living south of 110th Street in Manhattan.
133 od was developed by use of randomly selected streets in a suburb of Salt Lake City, Utah, in June 200
134 that cause children and youth to turn to the streets in the first place, in all regions of the world.
135 on (OR, 3.00; 95% CI, 0.96-9.37) and unpaved streets in the neighborhood (OR, 2.14; 95% CI, 0.71-6.43
136 l ambient levels of air pollution along busy streets in view of these negative health effects.
137 as "if traffic light is green then cross the street." In most cases, however, more complex rule sets
138 are significant positives to working on Wall Street, including exposure to cutting-edge clinical/tran
139                    Attack rates according to street increased with the street's proximity to Lake Tan
140 ts: empty parking lots, suburban residential streets, intermediate (1- or 2-lane) roads, highways, ru
141 able Children's Institutions (CCIs), and 100 street-involved children.
142 olicies developed or implemented to mitigate street involvement are not responsive to the needs of th
143 ren and youth who provided reasons for their street involvement infrequently identified delinquent be
144 of children and youth's reported reasons for street involvement is lacking.
145        The most commonly reported reason for street involvement was poverty, with a pooled-prevalence
146  youth, and (3) the quantitative reasons for street involvement were reported.
147 ng and developed countries as the reason for street involvement, with a pooled prevalence of 26% (95%
148 w reported family conflict as the reason for street involvement, with a pooled prevalence of 32% (95%
149 udies that reported quantitative reasons for street involvement.
150 absorbance, we compared how four alternative street lamp technologies affect the visual abilities of
151           The introduction of broad spectrum street lamps could therefore alter the balance of specie
152                          Emissions from four street leaks ranged from 9200 to 38,200 L CH4 day(-1) ea
153                                  Entropy and street length increase, because of spreading, with dista
154 We located 93.7% of subjects at the house or street level at initial diagnosis.
155 celona, samples of fine PM were collected at street level at sites with variable traffic density.
156                                           At street level on the same days, the mean BC and PM2.5 con
157                                  Substantial street-level air quality improvements can be gained thro
158 yielding rapid and sustained improvements in street-level air quality in dense urban areas.
159 g of vegetation in street canyons can reduce street-level concentrations in those canyons by as much
160                                              Street-level concentrations of nitrogen dioxide (NO(2))
161 e value of using computer vision methods and street-level imagery to understand the physical dynamics
162 reet View, which provides publicly available street-level imagery with nearly complete coverage of th
163 ppearances of neighborhoods from time-series street-level imagery.
164 iation of 15 PM2.5 elements collected at 150 street-level locations in New York City during December
165  of density of retail, public transport, and street-level movement density, which were modelled from
166 ion indicators were incarceration (n=38) and street-level policing (n=39), while the most frequent HI
167  March 2012; concurrently water samples from street-level taps in piped distribution systems and from
168 s are considerably higher than ambient urban street levels and that further monitoring and investigat
169                              The presence of street lighting (odds ratio [OR], 0.24; 95% CI, 0.09-0.7
170 nism driving moth declines, and suggest that street lighting potentially impacts upon pollination by
171 pplications ranging from regional night-time street lighting to atmospheric measurements.
172  should broaden their focus from residential street lighting to include security lighting within manu
173                Under a scenario for brighter street lighting, the area of accessible land cover was f
174 lly when in front of another vehicle, and in street lighting-other drivers can better avoid hitting t
175 al impact of scenarios for future changes to street lighting.
176 unlit sites, we found significant effects of street lighting: moth abundance at ground level was halv
177 n this study, we sought to determine whether street lights could limit moth dispersal and whether the
178      The community-level effects of existing street lights on moths and their biotic interactions hav
179           These results provide evidence for street lights to limit moth dispersal, and that they see
180 e sex-specific attraction radii for moths to street lights.
181  work indicates that urban trees adjacent to streets likely represent a major source of P pollution i
182 from network analyses of through movement of street links within the defined catchment.
183  diagnosis-dependent housing-to those on the street may be more successful when explicit psychiatric
184 remove 4-6.5 kg of food per year in a single street median, reducing its availability to less desirab
185 es of cookies, potato chips, and hot dogs in street medians (24 sites) and parks (21 sites) in New Yo
186              Even small green spaces such as street medians provide ecosystem services that may compl
187 re 100-200% larger than those of low-traffic streets; modeled effects of high-traffic streets on brea
188 omena of the Arab Spring and the Occupy Wall Street movement posit the question of whether the active
189 rk access were assessed in 1.0 km and 0.5 km street network buffers around each participant's residen
190  series of urban sprawl, as measured through street network connectivity, in the United States from 1
191 don Authority, based on the evolution of its street network during the last two centuries.
192 s long standing green belt, we show that its street network dynamics can be described as a fractal sp
193 tic political communication, the Occupy Wall Street network exhibits higher levels of locality and a
194                                    The urban street network is one of the most permanent features of
195 aces that were built with a low-connectivity street network tend to stay that way, even as the networ
196 land use patterns and characteristics of the street network that are health promoting.
197 for public use a county-level version of our street-network sprawl dataset comprising a time series o
198 ly more connected and grid-like; the peak in street-network sprawl in the United States occurred in a
199 within planar networks and apply them to the street networks of 41 British cities, whose geometric ev
200                    The results show that the street networks of the old central parts of the cities h
201 the movements of people and resources, urban street networks offer a spatial footprint of these activ
202 alkable (i.e., shorter block length, greater street node density, more developed land use, and higher
203 n and older adults were less walkable (fewer street nodes and lower density of street segments), afte
204 ent durations were measured along a two-lane street of one-way traffic without a traffic signal.
205 hic distribution of discarded needles on the streets of Baltimore, Maryland, and presents methods to
206              Modeled effects of high-traffic streets on ambient concentrations were 100-200% larger t
207 fic streets; modeled effects of high-traffic streets on breath concentrations were 40-100% larger tha
208 o test for the significance of the impact of streets on vector infestation based on a decomposition o
209 ogenic emission inventory (AMAP/UNEP, EDGAR, STREETS) on global Hg deposition patterns has been inves
210           The study randomized 202 long-term street opioid injectors in Vancouver, British Columbia,
211  which limits the options for many long-term street opioid injectors not attracted into or retained i
212         Noninferiority was confirmed for any street opioids in the ITT analysis (-0.85; 90% CI, -2.97
213 types of floor surfaces: beach sand, a paved street or grass.
214   Active travel often occurs on high-traffic streets or near activity centers where particulate conce
215 a, but not after riding on low-traffic local streets or on other off-street paths.
216 , 1.00-1.19), and traffic density on nearest street (OR for increase of 5000 vehicles per day 1.06, 1
217  along a commercial street in London (Oxford Street) or in an urban park (Hyde Park).
218 y measures for quantifying the complexity of street orientations and length variations within planar
219 ere recruited between 1997 and 1999 by using street outreach, targeted advertising, and chain-referra
220  environment is significantly constrained by streets (p<0.05).
221 on low-traffic local streets or on other off-street paths.
222 ian Field Latent Class model we confirm that streets provide a barrier against infestation and furthe
223                                           If street quality could be improved, even somewhat, for tho
224 solates of this virus with those of a coyote street rabies virus (COSRV) revealed that there are uniq
225 ttenuated tissue culture-adapted and natural street rabies virus (RV) strains differ greatly in their
226 anine rabies virus (RABV) has been used as a street rabies virus in laboratory investigations.
227 infection was sought among 37 HIV-1-positive street-recruited active injection drug users (IDUs) from
228                          HIV incidence among street-recruited IDUs in San Francisco appears to have r
229                      HIV-1 seroconversion of street-recruited IDUs in San Francisco is strongly assoc
230 ociated with HIV-1antibody seroconversion of street-recruited IDUs in San Francisco, from 1986 to 199
231 ncidence of antibody to HCV (anti-HCV) among street-recruited IDUs under age 30, and to examine risk
232 search (NADR) programme (n = 1029), in which street-recruited individuals were interviewed and tested
233 immunodeficiency virus (HIV) incidence among street-recruited injection drug users (IDUs) in San Fran
234 oods with a higher density of trees on their streets report significantly higher health perception an
235                      We describe a series of street riots that took place in the city of Liverpool in
236 uch as soil and poultry litter leachates and street runoff, accounted for the remaining 30%.
237 boratory-adapted RV strain CVS-N2c or with a street RV of silver-haired bat origin.
238 rates according to street increased with the street's proximity to Lake Tanganyika (chi 2 test for li
239 erivatives (4-MMC and 4-MEC) in three seized street samples that are independently analyzed with high
240 ted by prescreening of SCs in 12 confiscated street samples that were also independently analyzed by
241 of synthetic cathinone derivatives in seized street samples.
242            Neighborhood micro-environmental, street scale elements may contribute to health above and
243 lex relationships among micro-environmental, street scale elements that may confer important cardiome
244 nal outreach activities, community-scale and street-scale urban design and land use, active transport
245  200 US cities by using 50 million images of street scenes gathered with Google Street View cars.
246 and Health Disparities (median block length, street segment, and node density) and the US Geological
247 oad network using the relative angle between street segments as the occupation probability.
248  characterising the influence of each of the street segments on the system.
249 ble (fewer street nodes and lower density of street segments), after adjustment for region and level
250 re developed land use, and higher density of street segments).
251 Urban Health Study (UHS) recruited IDUs from street settings in San Francisco Bay area neighborhoods.
252 om different government farmers' markets and street shops in urban areas.
253  as reading ordinary print, small print, and street signs are easier to perform for graduates of both
254 ox consecutively admitted to the Southampton Street smallpox hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, durin
255 s that stemness and metastasis are a two-way street: Sox2, a major mediator of CSC self-renewal, also
256 zation confirmed that Nichols strain UNC and Street strain 14 each contain a single copy of tprK, ind
257 R-amplified tprK from Nichols strain UNC and Street strain 14 treponemes showed that TprK has seven r
258 particular interest is the interplay between street structure and its functional usage.
259 p transcripts were reviewed alongside the on-street survey responses to identify key issues.
260 ed in eight focus groups and commissioned on-street surveys.
261 ring leaf litter that is not removed by fall street sweeping could be an important source to winter l
262 nd ultrafine particles were higher on Oxford Street than in Hyde Park.
263 rivers drove a virtual London taxi along the streets they had first learned 40 years before.
264 ly removed from the city-center or b) on off-street trails.
265 , we sampled arthropods from a single common street tree species across temperature gradients in four
266         We survey M. tenebricosa on 55 urban street trees in Raleigh, NC, 342 herbarium specimens col
267 and other ways, public health benefits from, street trees, green roofs, community gardens, parks and
268 sons who ate fresh Mexican-style cheese from street vendors and from cheese samples and raw milk.
269 ldren and adults all watched the same Sesame Street video during functional magnetic resonance imagin
270 images of street scenes gathered with Google Street View cars.
271 g high-precision methane analyzers in Google Street View cars.
272 buildings) on 1,826 block faces using Google Street View imagery (Google, Inc., Mountain View, Califo
273 e city of Detroit, Michigan: One used Google Street View imagery from 2009 and the other used an in-p
274                           We equipped Google Street View vehicles with a fast-response pollution meas
275                         The advent of Google Street View, which provides publicly available street-le
276 as over four times greater when at least one street was in fair or poor condition (characterized by c
277 plified Acute Physiology Score II, living in street was significantly associated with hospital mortal
278              Yet when she first rides in the street, we hope that if a car suddenly pulls out in fron
279                                     When all streets were in good condition, the odds of reporting mo
280  ago escaped from physicians and gone to the streets, where it is popularly used also as synonymous w
281 Class model to finely describe the effect of streets while controlling for cofactors and imperfect de
282 r four years, the complex layout of London's streets while training to become licensed taxi drivers.
283  obstacles, such as pedestrians crossing the street, while ignoring irrelevant objects.
284  (intersection, proximity to a bus stop, and street width) as having the more significant determinati
285  these rhuMAbs neutralizes several fixed and street wild-type rabies viruses (RVs).
286 diovascular responses of walking down a busy street with high levels of pollution compared with walki
287 , MN, U.S.A., and at the scale of individual streets within one residential watershed.
288  living in HH (AOR 2.6, 95% CI: 2.0-3.4) and street youth (AOR: 5.9, 95% CI: 3.6-9.5) were more likel
289 d infections, HIV infection, and drug use in street youth at a juvenile detention facility, adults at
290  search the databases: "street children" OR "street youth" OR "homeless youth" OR "homeless children"
291 ipants (1337 in CCI's, 1425 in HH's, and 100 street youth).
292 adequate diet vs. 95% in CCI's and 99% among street youth.

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