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Creators/Authors contains: "Jennings, Richard"

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  1. Baba, Justin S; Coté, Gerard L (Ed.)
    In this research, we examine the potential of measuring physiological variables, including heart rate (HR) and respiration rate (RR) on the upper arm using a wireless multimodal sensing system consisting of an accelerometer, a gyroscope, a three-wavelength photoplethysmography (PPG), single-sided electrocardiography (SS-ECG), and bioimpedance (BioZ). The study included collecting HR data when the subject was at rest and typing, and RR data when the subject was at rest. The data from three wavelengths of PPG and BioZ were collected and compared to the SS-ECG as the standard. The accelerometer and gyro signals were used to exclude data with excessive noise due to motion. The results showed that when the subject remained sedentary, the mean absolute error (MAE) for the HR calculation for all three wavelengths of the PPG modality was less than two bpm, while the BioZ was 3.5 bpm compared with SS-ECG HR. The MAE for typing increased for both modalities and was less than three bpm for all three wavelengths of the PPG but increased to 7.5 bpm for the BioZ. Regarding RR, both modalities resulted in RR within one breath per minute of the SS-ECG modality for the one breathing rate. Overall, all modalities on this upper arm wearable worked well when the subject was sedentary. Still, the SS-ECG and PPG showed less variability for the HR signal in the presence of motion during micro-motions such as typing. 
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  2. Abstract The grey wolf (Canis lupus) was the first species to give rise to a domestic population, and they remained widespread throughout the last Ice Age when many other large mammal species went extinct. Little is known, however, about the history and possible extinction of past wolf populations or when and where the wolf progenitors of the present-day dog lineage (Canis familiaris) lived1–8. Here we analysed 72 ancient wolf genomes spanning the last 100,000 years from Europe, Siberia and North America. We found that wolf populations were highly connected throughout the Late Pleistocene, with levels of differentiation an order of magnitude lower than they are today. This population connectivity allowed us to detect natural selection across the time series, including rapid fixation of mutations in the geneIFT8840,000–30,000 years ago. We show that dogs are overall more closely related to ancient wolves from eastern Eurasia than to those from western Eurasia, suggesting a domestication process in the east. However, we also found that dogs in the Near East and Africa derive up to half of their ancestry from a distinct population related to modern southwest Eurasian wolves, reflecting either an independent domestication process or admixture from local wolves. None of the analysed ancient wolf genomes is a direct match for either of these dog ancestries, meaning that the exact progenitor populations remain to be located. 
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