Automated Author ProfileHussein, Mohamed
Hussein, Mohamed
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 1.0 (sum of 3 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
Supplemental material, sj-zip-1-ueg-10.1177_2050640620938549 for Outcomes of Hemospray therapy in the treatment of intraprocedural upper gastrointestinal bleeding post-endoscopic therapy by Mohamed Hussein, Durayd Alzoubaidi, Alvaro de la Serna, Michael Weaver, Jacobo O Fernandez-Sordo, Johannes W Rey, Bu’Hussain Hayee, Edward Despott, Alberto Murino, Sulleman Moreea, Phil Boger, Jason Dunn, Inder Mainie, David Graham, Dan Mullady, Dayna Early, Krish Ragunath, John Anderson, Pradeep Bhandari, Martin Goetz, Ralf Kiesslich, Emmanuel Coron, Enrique R de Santiago, Tamas Gonda, Laurence B Lovat and Rehan Haidry in United European Gastroenterology Journal
Authors
- Hussein, Mohamed ;
- Durayd Alzoubaidi ;
- Serna, Alvaro De La ;
- Weaver, Michael ;
- Fernandez-Sordo, Jacobo O ;
- Rey, Johannes W ;
- Bu’Hussain Hayee ;
- Despott, Edward ;
- Murino, Alberto ;
- Sulleman Moreea ;
- Boger, Phil ;
- Dunn, Jason ;
- Mainie, Inder ;
- Graham, David ;
- Mullady, Dan ;
- Early, Dayna ;
- Krish Ragunath ;
- Anderson, John ;
- Bhandari, Pradeep ;
- Goetz, Martin ;
- Kiesslich, Ralf ;
- Coron, Emmanuel ;
- Santiago, Enrique R De ;
- Gonda, Tamas ;
- Lovat, Laurence B ;
- Haidry, Rehan
Supplemental material, sj-zip-1-ueg-10.1177_2050640620938549 for Outcomes of Hemospray therapy in the treatment of intraprocedural upper gastrointestinal bleeding post-endoscopic therapy by Mohamed Hussein, Durayd Alzoubaidi, Alvaro de la Serna, Michael Weaver, Jacobo O Fernandez-Sordo, Johannes W Rey, Bu’Hussain Hayee, Edward Despott, Alberto Murino, Sulleman Moreea, Phil Boger, Jason Dunn, Inder Mainie, David Graham, Dan Mullady, Dayna Early, Krish Ragunath, John Anderson, Pradeep Bhandari, Martin Goetz, Ralf Kiesslich, Emmanuel Coron, Enrique R de Santiago, Tamas Gonda, Laurence B Lovat and Rehan Haidry in United European Gastroenterology Journal
Authors
- Hussein, Mohamed ;
- Durayd Alzoubaidi ;
- Serna, Alvaro De La ;
- Weaver, Michael ;
- Fernandez-Sordo, Jacobo O ;
- Rey, Johannes W ;
- Bu’Hussain Hayee ;
- Despott, Edward ;
- Murino, Alberto ;
- Sulleman Moreea ;
- Boger, Phil ;
- Dunn, Jason ;
- Mainie, Inder ;
- Graham, David ;
- Mullady, Dan ;
- Early, Dayna ;
- Krish Ragunath ;
- Anderson, John ;
- Bhandari, Pradeep ;
- Goetz, Martin ;
- Kiesslich, Ralf ;
- Coron, Emmanuel ;
- Santiago, Enrique R De ;
- Gonda, Tamas ;
- Lovat, Laurence B ;
- Haidry, Rehan
1.Building on the predictions of state-dependent life history theory, telomeres are hypothesized to either correlate with or function as an adaptive, proximate mediator of an individual’s behavior and life-history strategy. To further understand the relationship between telomeres, behavior, and life-history strategies, we measured male behavior, telomere lengths, and telomere dynamics in a free-living population of known-age, male wire-tailed manakins (Pipra filicauda). 2.Male wire-tailed manakins perform coordinated displays with other males at leks and these displays form the basis of long-term coalition partnerships. Males exhibit consistent individual differences in the number of social partners within their social network and the frequency of social interactions. Male sociality is also positively correlated with both social rise and reproductive success. 3.We measured male behavior using a telemetry-based, proximity datalogging system and blood telomere lengths were quantified using qPCR. We examined the relationships between telomere length, telomere dynamics, social status, and male behavior. We also quantified the repeatability of telomere lengths, examined age-related changes in telomere length, and tested for instances of telomere elongation that exceed residual error in telomere length.4.Telomere length was found to be highly repeatable. More social males exhibited shorter telomeres and higher rates of telomere attrition. Telomeres did not significantly vary with age within or between individuals in either of the male social classes. Two out of 25 individuals exhibited patterns telomere elongation that exceeded residual error in telomere measurements.5.Here we show that telomeres consistently vary between male wire-tailed manakins and these differences are related to variation in male social behavior. In this relatively long-lived species, telomeres also appear to be flexible traits that can increase or decrease in length. Overall, this study provides observational support for the hypothesis that telomeres act as a molecular marker that relates to behavior in a state-dependent manner. We also provide insight into the molecular consequences of individual variation in male social behavior.This dataset was updated on 20201109. The original dataset can be found at the following DOI, doi:10.7294/mpcg-qx45
Authors
- Hussein, Mohamed ;
- Ibrahim, Ahmed ;
- Abbott, Lynn