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1

Clark, L. J., R. Walser, and E. W. Carpenter. "Green Bean Variety Trial, Safford Agricultural Center, 1998." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/219987.

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Twelve green bean varieties were grown in a replicated small plot trial on the Safford Agricultural Center in 1998. Varieties were picked regularly during the growing season. Yields are shown in tabular form and also graphically to indicate how each variety performed throughout the season. Rapids produced the highest yield with a total over 1.3 tons per acre. Two other varieties, Shade and HMX 6999, also performed well with yields over 1.0 tons per acre.
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2

Buhrow, Russ, and Lee Clark. "Results of 1985 Dry Bean Trials in Safford." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/200553.

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3

Clark, L. J., and E. W. Carpenter. "National Dry Bean Nursey Trials in Bonita, 1994." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/201469.

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Results of the 1994 National Cooperative Dry Bean Nursery Trials are reported in this report Thirty two varieties of eight different classes of beans were included in this replicated, small plot trial Bill-Z, the leading pinto bean variety in the area, was the highest yielding variety with a yield over 4200 pounds per acre. Chase, a pinto variety recently developed with strong rust tolerance, yielded over 4000 pounds per acre. Yields, seed per pound, days to bloom, seed fall duration and yield per day of seed fill are reported in this paper.
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4

Clark, Lee J., and E. W. Carpenter. "National Dry Bean Nursery Trials in Bonita, 1999." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/204103.

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This report contains the results of the 1999 National Cooperative Dry Bean Nursery Trials. This replicated, small plot trial contains thirty nine varieties of ten different classes of beans. Buster, a pinto variety was the highest yielding variety in the study with a yield over 3700 pounds per acre. Yields, percent moisture, aerial biomass, harvest index, seeds per pound, and plant populations are reported for this study.
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5

Clark, L. J., R. Walser, and E. W. Carpenter. "National Dry Bean Nursery Trials in Bonita, 1998." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/205175.

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Results of the 1998 National Cooperative Dry Bean Nursery Trials are reported in this paper. Forty one varieties of nine different classes of beans were included in this replicated, small plot trial. AC Calmont, a dark red kidney variety was the highest yielding variety in the study with a yield over 2800 pounds per acre. Kodiak was the highest yielding pinto variety with a yield over 2700 pounds per acre. Yields, seed per pound, aerial biomass, harvest index, plant population days to 50% bloom and days to 50% pod set are reported for this study. In addition to the small plot replicated trial, a pinto variety strip trial was conducted at this site. Nine varieties, including the best varieties from past trials, were tested in this study. ISB 2001 was the leading variety in this study with a yield of 3276 pounds per acre.
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6

Clark, L. J., and E. W. Carpenter. "National Dry Bean Nursery Trials in Bonita, 1997." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/208285.

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Results of the 1997 National Cooperative Dry Bean Nursery Trials are reported in this paper. Thirty five varieties of seven different classes of beans were included in this replicated, small plot trial. Ole, a variety from Ag Canada was the highest yielding variety in the study with a yield over 4800 pounds per acre. Both Ole and ISB 2001 had yields higher than Bill Z, the highest yielding pinto bean in the area. Four varieties had yields over the 4000 pound per acre level. Yields, seed per pound, aerial biomass, harvest index, plant population and percent splits are also reported.
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7

Clark, L. J., V. Marcarian, E. W. Carpenter, R. E. Cluff, and R. E. Call. "National Dry Bean Nursery Trials in Bonita, 1992-1993." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/201437.

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Results of the 1992 and 1993 National Cooperative Dry Bean Nursery Trials are reported in this report. More than 30 varieties of seven classes of beans were tested in small plot, replicated studies. Yields, seed size, harvest index, biomass production and plant populations are among the variables recorded in the trials.
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8

Clark, L. J., E. DeRosa, E. Schwenneson, and R. E. Cluff. "Pinto Bean Variety Trials in Graham and Greenlee Counties, 1988." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/201076.

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Two pinto bean variety trials were grown in Greenlee and southern Graham counties. UI 114, the most commonly grown variety in both areas, was out yielded in both locations by other varieties. In Greenlee county, Luna, a New Mexico variety, surpassed UI 114 by approximately 100 pounds per acre. In Graham county, Olathe, a Colorado variety, out yielded UI 114 by more than 250 pounds per acre. At $40 per hundredweight, the latter difference translates into more than $100 per acre.
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9

Vermöhlen, Vanessa, Petra Schiller, Sabine Schickendantz, Marion Drache, Sabine Hussack, Andreas Gerber-Grote, and Dieter Pöhlau. "Hippotherapy for patients with multiple sclerosis: A multicenter randomized controlled trial (MS-HIPPO)." Sage, 2018. https://tud.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A35527.

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Background: Evidence-based complementary treatment options for multiple sclerosis (MS) are limited. Objective: To investigate the effect of hippotherapy plus standard care versus standard care alone in MS patients. Methods: A total of 70 adults with MS were recruited in five German centers and randomly allocated to the intervention group (12 weeks of hippotherapy) or the control group. Primary outcome was the change in the Berg Balance Scale (BBS) after 12 weeks, and further outcome measures included fatigue, pain, quality of life, and spasticity. Results: Covariance analysis of the primary endpoint resulted in a mean difference in BBS change of 2.33 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.03–4.63, p = 0.047) between intervention (n = 32) and control (n = 38) groups. Benefit on BBS was largest for the subgroup with an Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) ⩾ 5 (5.1, p = 0.001). Fatigue (−6.8, p = 0.02) and spasticity (−0.9, p = 0.03) improved in the intervention group. The mean difference in change between groups was 12.0 (p < 0.001) in physical health score and 14.4 (p < 0.001) in mental health score of Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life-54 (MSQoL-54). Conclusion: Hippotherapy plus standard care, while below the threshold of a minimal clinically important difference, significantly improved balance and also fatigue, spasticity, and quality of life in MS patients.
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10

Murphy, Mary. "Investigating the decision making process in patients with non-curative cancer who have been invited to join a clinical research trial." Thesis, Ulster University, 2015. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.648023.

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Background: Clinical research that has no curative intent involving patients nearing the end of life, presents an ethically challenging situation. Previous research has demonstrated that these patients' understanding of clinical trials can be limited. Aim: This study seeks to understand the decision making process of patients with incurable cancer within the context of clinical research trials and to explore the clinical research teams' perspective on patients' decision making. Method: A modified grounded theory approach was used. This approach combined classic grounded theory methodology with the symbolic interaction element of Charmaz' grounded theory. Sixteen patients and eighteen research team members were interviewed. Data were analysed using a constant comparative method. Results: Nothing to lose emerged as the core category. Consenting patients made their decision instantly and were influenced by factors including, desire for increased longevity, an expectation to receive better attention, and the persuasive language used by doctors and nurses. They gave little consideration to the side-effects of the trial drug. Patients who declined did so after much deliberation . They were concerned about extra hospital visits and unknown side-effects. Oncologists and clinical research nurses believed that clinical care was highly protocolised and therefore better than care during standard treatment and as a result they thought that patients had nothing to lose by participating in a clinical trial. Conclusion: These findings demonstrate that patients' motivation for trial consent is complex. They perceive themselves in a paternalistic relationship with their doctor and thus are influenced by the emotional context and language used. Patients evaluated the risk of trial participation in the context of a limited lifespan thinking "I have nothing to lose." Consenting patients put significant value on the trial as a vehicle of hope and personalised care from the research team, whereas decliners decided they had more to lose by trial participation and opted for standard treatment.
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11

Carbone, Jonathan N. "It Must Have Been Him: Coherence Effects within the Legal System." FIU Digital Commons, 2015. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2204.

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The present series of studies examine how jurors and public defenders evaluate different pieces of evidence and integrate them into a coherent conclusion within the context of a criminal case. Previous research has shown that in situations where both sides of the case are compelling, decision-makers nevertheless come to highly confident and polarized decisions, called coherence shifts (Simon, 2004). The present research sought to expand on coherence effects, improve upon the methodology of previous studies, and explore potential moderators of coherence. In Study 1, mock jurors (n = 306) read about a criminal case and evaluated multiple pieces of evidence at various points throughout the case. Results indicated that participants exhibited pronounced coherence shifts (i.e., their evaluations of the various pieces of evidence (a) became more consistent as the case progressed, and (b) were evaluated in line with their initial leanings) using an improved methodology that randomized evidence order and evidence valence. Furthermore, participants’ interim leanings of guilt or innocence biased their subsequent evaluations of ambiguous evidence. The direction and magnitude of participants’ coherence shifts were predicted by their pretrial dispositions towards prosecution and defense. Participants lacked awareness of how their perceptions of the evidence have shifted. Coherence shifts were not, however, moderated by asking mock jurors to justify their decisions, or by asking mock jurors to play devil’s advocate while considering each piece of evidence, underscoring the pervasiveness of this cognitive bias. Study 2 examined whether actual public defenders experience coherence shifts and how those shifts relate to the plea bargaining process; however, no coherence shifts were observed. Study 3 examined whether the timing of the defense’s presentation of their case could reduce coherence effects; results indicated that reading about the defense’s case immediately after the prosecution’s case (c.f. following a delay) marginally (p = .09) reduced coherence effects among jurors who acquitted the defendant, suggesting one potential strategy to mitigate this bias.
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12

Ball, Dewi Ioan. "The silent revolution : how the key attributes of tribal power have been fundamentally eroded by the United States Supreme Court from 1973." Thesis, Swansea University, 2007. https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42976.

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13

Schmidt, Bastian [Verfasser], Holger [Akademischer Betreuer] Jentsch, Bernd W. [Gutachter] Sigusch, and Holger A. [Gutachter] Jakstat. "Comparison between two procedures of interproximal cleaning in periodontitis patients: a six month, single blind, randomized controlled clinical trial / Bastian Schmidt ; Gutachter: Bernd W. Sigusch, Holger A. Jakstat ; Betreuer: Holger Jentsch." Leipzig : Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, 2014. http://d-nb.info/1238789889/34.

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14

Smati, Amor. "Les gisements de Pb-Ba et de Fe du Jebel Slata (Tunisie du Centre-Nord) : minéralisations épigénétiques dans le crétacé nérétique de la bordute d'un diapir de trias : gisements de Sidi Amor Ben Salem et de Slata-Fer." Paris 6, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986PA066084.

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15

Smati, Amor. "Les Gisements de Pb-Ba et de Fe du Jebel Slata (Tunisie du centre nord) minéralisations épigénétiques dans le Crétacé néritique de la bordure d'un Diapir de Trias, gisements de Sidi Amor Ben Salem et de Slata-Fer /." Grenoble 2 : ANRT, 1986. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37601324f.

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16

Anthes, Johann. "Beitrag von Ackerbohne (Vicia faba L.), Luzerne (Medicago sativa L.) und Saatwicke (Vicia sativa L.) zur Selbstregelung der N-Zufuhr in leguminosenbasierten Fruchtfolgen." Doctoral thesis, [S.l.] : [s.n.], 2005. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=975015044.

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17

Berg, Daniela [Verfasser]. "Entwicklung von TRAIL-Fusionsproteinen und ihre Wirkung auf Myelomzellen / vorgelegt von Daniela Berg." 2008. http://d-nb.info/988955954/34.

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