Journal articles on the topic 'Hyperflexible'

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1

Weber, Alexander E., Asheesh Bedi, Lisa M. Tibor, Ira Zaltz, and Christopher M. Larson. "The Hyperflexible Hip." Sports Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach 7, no. 4 (April 23, 2014): 346–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1941738114532431.

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2

Lim, Wesley. "Reimagining the Brown Body." TDR: The Drama Review 65, no. 3 (September 2021): 78–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1054204321000320.

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William Forsythe’s screendance Alignigung (2016) depicts two male dancers, one fair- and the other brown-skinned, in hyperflexible and intimate configurations that vacillate between object and human. Alignigung engages with an egalitarian ethos along the same lines as contact improvisation but further demonstrates an alternative masculinity through movement qualities by reimagining the stereotypical brown body.
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3

Pristed Nielsen, Helene. "Offshore but on track? Hypermobile and hyperflexible working lives." Community, Work & Family 19, no. 5 (March 16, 2016): 538–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13668803.2016.1142427.

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4

Larson, Christopher M., James R. Ross, Russell Giveans, Rebecca M. Stone, Nicole M. Ramos, and Asheesh Bedi. "The Dancers Hip: The Hyperflexible Athlete: Anatomy & Arthroscopic Clinical Outcomes." Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine 5, no. 7_suppl6 (July 2017): 2325967117S0041. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967117s00418.

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5

Wolff, Jonas O., Jochen Martens, Axel L. Schönhofer, and Stanislav N. Gorb. "Evolution of hyperflexible joints in sticky prey capture appendages of harvestmen (Arachnida, Opiliones)." Organisms Diversity & Evolution 16, no. 3 (April 4, 2016): 549–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13127-016-0278-2.

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6

Shammas, Victor L. "Superfluity and insecurity: Disciplining surplus populations in the Global North." Capital & Class 42, no. 3 (November 2, 2017): 411–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309816817738319.

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Capitalism in northern societies is entering an age of advanced precarity. On the one hand, postindustrial societies are confronted by growing surplus populations for whom there exist few positive functions in the market. These new ‘dangerous classes’ are increasingly subject to surveillance, discipline, and exclusion as the policing and penal instruments of the state are called upon to detect and contain risk. On the other hand, capitalism’s ‘insiders’ are increasingly consigned to a precarious life of hyperflexible labor and generalized insecurity. Confronted with a growing mass of ‘social detritus’, augmented by advances in automation and catalyzed by accelerating flows of capital, states in the Global North will increasingly be forced to mobilize the disciplinary instruments of policing and punishment to contain the swelling ranks of problem populations.
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7

Mourer-Chauviré, Cécile. "Les horusornithidae nov. fam., accipitriformes (Aves) a articulation intertarsienne hyperflexible de l'éocene du Quercy." Geobios 24 (January 1991): 183–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0016-6995(66)80023-2.

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8

Larson, Christopher M., James R. Ross, M. Russell Giveans, Rebecca Stone McGaver, Katelyn N. Weed, and Asheesh Bedi. "The Dancer’s Hip: The Hyperflexible Athlete: Anatomy and Mean 3-Year Arthroscopic Clinical Outcomes." Arthroscopy: The Journal of Arthroscopic & Related Surgery 36, no. 3 (March 2020): 725–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arthro.2019.09.023.

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9

Shammas, Victor L. "Surplus Populations and the State: A Criminological View." International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy 8, no. 1 (February 18, 2019): 131–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/ijcjsd.v8i1.1032.

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Surplus populations are back on the political agenda. With the rise of automation technologies and the advent of the hyperflexible ‘gig economy’, millions of individuals across the post-industrialised world will likely become supernumerary or consigned to low-quality jobs in the service sector. Neoliberalism signalled the abdication of the state’s responsibility for ensuring full employment and providing high-quality employment. However, criminology has largely forgotten the central roles played by both in preventing the spread of social pathologies. Against the logic of neoliberalism, what is needed is a state capable of counteracting the formation of surplus populations, or an anti-surplus state. A second New Deal would enact infrastructure investments and re-embed superfluous populations into meaningful employment relations. Following Bourdieu’s criticism of a scientistic ‘flight into purity’, criminologists should adopt the lessons learned by Sweden’s interwar social democrats and advocate policies capable of preventing the augmentation of social superfluity.
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10

Veith, Austin, Xue Li, Hailey Modi, Ali Abbaspour, Lan Luan, Chong Xie, and Aaron B. Baker. "Optimized design of a hyperflexible sieve electrode to enhance neurovascular regeneration for a peripheral neural interface." Biomaterials 275 (August 2021): 120924. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2021.120924.

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11

Shapiro, Yoel, Kosa Gabor, and Alon Wolf. "Modeling a Hyperflexible Planar Bending Actuator as an Inextensible Euler–Bernoulli Beam for Use in Flexible Robots." Soft Robotics 2, no. 2 (June 2015): 71–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/soro.2015.0003.

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12

Lin, Li-Mei, Geoffrey P. Colby, Rajiv R. Iyer, Bowen Jiang, Judy Huang, Rafael J. Tamargo, and Alexander L. Coon. "Pentaxial access platform for ultra-distal intracranial delivery of a large-bore hyperflexible DIC (distal intracranial catheter): A technical note." Interdisciplinary Neurosurgery 6 (December 2016): 29–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.inat.2016.06.002.

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13

Lin, Li-Mei, Geoffrey P. Colby, Judy Huang, Rafael J. Tamargo, and Alexander L. Coon. "Ultra-distal large-bore intracranial access using the hyperflexible Navien distal intracranial catheter for the treatment of cerebrovascular pathologies: a technical note." Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery 6, no. 4 (June 1, 2013): 301–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/neurintsurg-2013-010772.

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14

Chandran, Arun, Mani Puthuran, Paul R. Eldridge, and Hans C. Nahser. "Distal access using hyperflexible atraumatic distal tip with optimized proximal stability of the Benchmark intracranial guide catheter for the treatment of cerebral vascular diseases: a technical note." Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery 8, no. 7 (June 12, 2015): 718–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/neurintsurg-2015-011788.

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BackgroundA stable guide catheter position within the intracranial vasculature is critical for safe, successful endovascular treatment.ObjectiveTo present ourinitial experience with the 0.071 inch inner diameter Benchmark guide catheter used in the treatment of intracranial cerebrovascular pathologies, demonstrating its safety and efficacy.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed use of the Benchmark guide catheter from September through December 2014 in the management of various neuroendovascular intracranial pathologies. Clinical performance and complication rates were evaluated, with particular consideration of vessel tortuosity. A total of 62 Benchmarks were used, 47 in the anterior circulation, 10 in the posterior circulation, 4 in the external carotid, and 1 in the venous sinus. The five cases with access to the external carotid and venous sinus were excluded.ResultsThe Benchmark was able to cross at least one 90° turn in 49 (86%) of the 57 patients. Reversal of the catheter was seen in 15% of 47 anterior circulation cases (4 at one 90° turn; 3 at two 90° turns). We report no complications of dissection or thromboembolic events. All guide catheter positions were safely achieved over a 0.035 Terumo stiff glidewire without need for an inner smaller lumen guide catheter for navigation.ConclusionsBenchmark is a new guide catheter, with an ideal combination of both hyperflexible, atraumatic distal tip and optimized proximal shaft support to provide stable 6F primary access for a successful neurointerventional procedure. Benchmark can be easily, safely, and consistently positioned in a desired location within intracranial arteries providing a stable position for intervention and adequate angiography.
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15

Patel, Apar S., Christoph J. Griessenauer, Christopher S. Ogilvy, and Ajith J. Thomas. "Biaxial system using the Benchmark intracranial guide catheter for placement of a Pipeline Embolization Device for intracranial aneurysms." Interventional Neuroradiology 22, no. 4 (February 22, 2016): 402–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1591019916632490.

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Background The Benchmark (Penumbra, Alameda, CA) is a novel intracranial guide catheter that provides optimized proximal stability combined with a hyperflexible and atraumatic tip. We assessed the use of a biaxial catheter system consistent with the Benchmark and Marksman microcatheter for placement of a Pipeline embolization device (PED) for intracranial aneurysms. Methods We reviewed consecutive patients with aneurysms undergoing Pipeline embolization for an aneurysm using the biaxial system from April to October 2015 at a major academic institution in the United States. Benchmark performance was measured by the number of 90° turns the catheter could safely cross. Landing and final positions of the Benchmark were recorded. Results A total of 26 procedures were performed in 25 patients (mean age 59.5 ± 10.3 years; male:female = 1:4). In one case (3.8%) the biaxial system had to be substituted for a traditional triaxial system. The Benchmark was able to cross one, two, or three 90° turns in 48%, 40%, and 8% of cases, respectively. There was one (3.8%) thromboembolic event and no arterial dissections. In the period from January 2014 to March 2015 and prior to adopting the biaxial system we encountered three thromboembolic events (6.4%) and one (2.1%) dissection potentially related to the triaxial system in 47 PED procedures. Conclusion Preliminary experience shows that a biaxial system using the Benchmark is a safe and efficacious alternative to the traditional triaxial guide catheter system for placement of PED and may reduce the complexity and duration of the procedure.
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16

Božić, Katarina, Tatjana Milenković, Srđan Pašić, Katarina Mitrović, Slađana Todorović, Gordana Petrović, Sanja Panić-Zarić, Milica Zečević, and Rade Vuković. "First report on growth hormone treatment response in a patient with spondylodysplastic type of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome with normal growth hormone secretion." Zdravstvena zastita 50, no. 1 (2021): 47–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zdravzast50-30794.

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Introduction/Aim: Spondylodysplastic Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (sdEDS) is a rare genetic disorder of collagen synthesis, caused by a mutation in the B4GALT7, B3GALT6, or SLC39A13 gene. Features of this very rare disorder are short stature, hypotonia, hyperflexible joints, soft, thin, and overly stretchable skin, sparse hair and eyebrows, elderly face, wide forehead and prolonged wound healing. Molecular genetic analysis is needed for definite confirmation of the diagnosis. So far, only three case reports describing growth hormone treatment response in patients with sdEDS have been published. All of these patients had growth hormone (GH) deficiency. We present the first case report regarding growth hormone treatment response in a patient with sdEDS and normal GH secretion (without GH deficiency). Case report: Patient was a girl with short stature and normal GH secretion. Having in mind that the girl was born small for the gestational age, due to her short stature, she started using HR, before the diagnosis of sdEDS was made. Based on the lack of improvement in growth velocity as well as the girl's phenotype, genetic analyses were performed and the diagnosis of sdEDS due to biallelic mutations of the B4GALT7 gene was established. After the diagnosis of sdEDS was made and due to suboptimal response in growth velocity to the GH treatment, the GH therapy was stopped at the age of 11 years. Conclusion: This is a first case report regarding GH treatment in a child with sdEDS and normal GH secretion, demonstrating a very limited therapeutic effect of GH on linear growth in the presented patient.
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17

Altenried, Moritz. "The platform as factory: Crowdwork and the hidden labour behind artificial intelligence." Capital & Class 44, no. 2 (January 22, 2020): 145–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309816819899410.

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This article analyses crowdwork platforms where various forms of digital labour are outsourced to digital workers across the globe. The labour of these workers is, among other things, a crucial component in the production, development and support of artificial intelligence. Crowdwork platforms are an extreme example of new forms of automated measurement, management and control of labour allowing, in turn, for the creation of hyperflexible and highly scalable workforces. Particularly on so-called microtask platforms, work is characterised by decomposition, standardisation, automated management and surveillance, as well as algorithmically organised cooperation between a great number of workers. Analysing these platforms as a paradigmatic example of an emerging digital Taylorism, the article goes on to argue that this allows the platforms to assemble a deeply heterogeneous set of workers while bypassing the need to spatially and subjectively homogenise them. These platforms create a global on-demand workforce, working in their private homes or Internet cafes. As a result, crowdwork taps into labour pools hitherto almost inaccessible to wage labour. The second part of the article investigates this tendency by looking at two sets of workers: women shouldering care responsibilities, who now can work on crowdwork platforms while performing domestic labour, as well as digital workers in the Global South. While there are clear specifics of digital crowdwork, it is also an expression of broader transformations within the world of work, concerning, for example, new forms of algorithmic management just as the return of very old forms of exploitation such as the piece wage.
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18

Cowling, Michael, Sherre Roy, Lisa Bricknell, and Robert Vanderburg. "Virtual Scholarship and Real Academics:." Pacific Journal of Technology Enhanced Learning 3, no. 1 (February 16, 2021): 37–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjtel.v3i1.102.

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Like many other regional universities in Australia, the authors’ university is well equipped to deal with distance and technology (Chugh, Ledger & Shields, 2017), with staff distributed across more than 10 campuses, and many working from home on a regular basis in a non-COVID year. Yet despite this, the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 presented challenges, as staff are not immune from the digital divide issues of bandwidth speed and stability, especially as the whole world moves to a video conferenced meeting solution. This presentation will discuss how our university handled this new triple headed challenge of a renewed focus on Scholarship of Learning & Teaching (SoLT) in relation to Australian government advice (Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency, 2020), along with a desire for upskilling in TEL, but simultaneously the limitations of technology in the pandemic, with a view to providing guidance for other institutions looking to mount this challenge. In tackling this issue in 2020, we were fortunate that our university already provided several avenues for staff to engage in and learn about SoLT. Among these, the Scholarship of Tertiary Teaching (SoTT) conference ran over two days via Zoom and offered several virtual concurrent sessions and topics allowing staff to share the results of their systematic evaluations into their teaching practice and student’s learning. Each session is recorded and made available via a YouTube channel, providing opportunity for conference participants to watch sessions they were unable to attend and this year we recognised the work of our presenters, abstract reviewers, and session facilitators with digital badges. Based on this successful model, we realized we had the essential tools already to move our other major training avenue, the Intro to SoLT workshops (previously delivered face-to-face), online. The aim of the workshops is to provide staff with a collegial environment to discuss and develop research ideas. The virtual environment makes this harder to achieve however the SOTT conference showed us that smaller sessions (four hours over four days), along with the use of breakout rooms could provide opportunity for small group discussion and that the value of Zoom Chat as a back channel for discussion was essential and should be encouraged amongst participants to provide an environment where we could maintain consistent support (Soon & Cowling, 2019). Attendance and feedback showed us that this worked. Over 50 staff attended the event over four days, and feedback was universally positive, and this led us to rethink how our L&T events should be offered. Specifically, the success of the changes suggests the development of a hyperflexible model of delivery, asynchronous but with guided support and local contacts (assisting to build campus networks), and the foundation knowledge of how to complete a systematic evaluation turned into an online module/micro-credential as a prerequisite for face-to-face and virtual workshops. The result being a L&T model that leverages the lessons learnt during the pandemic into a new blended model, bringing the best aspects of face-to-face and online delivery into a new academy of best L&T practice.
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19

Baumbach, S. F., W. Böcker, W. Mutschler, and M. Schieker. "Warum bricht die Wirbelsäule wo sie bricht?" Osteologie 21, no. 03 (2012): 143–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1621678.

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ZusammenfassungOsteoporotische Wirbelkörperfrakturen zeigen eine bimodale Verteilung (Th7/Th8 und Th11–L1), die sich nicht alleine durch eine generalisierte Reduktion der Wirbelkörperbruchlast erklären lässt. Das Ziel dieser Literaturübersicht war, neben osteoporotischen Veränderungen, biomechanische, degenerative und strukturelle Wirbelsäulenveränderungen zu identifizieren, die dieses bimodale Frakturmuster erklären. Biomechanisch befindet sich der thorakolumbaleÜbergang in einem Spannungsfeld zwischen der rigiden, kyphotischen Brustwirbelsäule (BWS) und der hyperflexiblen, lordotischen Lendenwirbelsäule. Auf den Apex der BWS-Kyphose wirken die größten Kompressions und Biegekräfte. Verstärkt wird dieser Effekt durch prävalente Wirbelkörperfraktur in diesem Bereich, die zu einer Frakturhäufung führen. Degenerative Veränderungen der Bandscheibe führen zu einer veränderten intra-und intervertebralen Lastübertragung. Dabei kommt es zu einer sekundären Schwächung der zentralen trabekulären Struktur und zu einer vermehrten Kraftübertragungüber die Facettengelenke im aufrechten Stand (Stress-Shielding), was einen Lastanstieg von bis zu 300 % auf den anterioren Wirbelkörper beim Vorbeugen zur Folge hat. Sowohl Osteoporose als auch veränderte Lastbedingungen führen zu Veränderungen der Wirbelkörpermorphologie. Während Osteoporose zu einer Reduktion der Wirbelkörperbruchlast insgesamt führt, bedingen degenerative Prozesse anisotrope intravertebrale Umbauvorgänge. Entsprechend der im Rahmen der Banscheibendegeneration auftretenden Lastveränderungen werden die zentralen und anterioren Wirbelkörper geschwächt.
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20

"Does A Hyperflexible Tongue Cause Snoring?" Internet Journal of Otorhinolaryngology 3, no. 2 (2005). http://dx.doi.org/10.5580/edc.

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21

Hoerner, Stefan, Shokoofeh Abbaszadeh, Olivier Cleynen, Cyrille Bonamy, Thierry Maître, and Dominique Thévenin. "Passive flow control mechanisms with bioinspired flexible blades in cross-flow tidal turbines." Experiments in Fluids 62, no. 5 (April 22, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00348-021-03186-8.

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Abstract State-of-the-art technologies for wind and tidal energy exploitation focus mostly on axial turbines. However, cross-flow hydrokinetic tidal turbines possess interesting features, such as higher area-based power density in array installations and shallow water, as well as a generally simpler design. Up to now, the highly unsteady flow conditions and cyclic blade stall have hindered deployment at large scales because of the resulting low single-turbine efficiency and fatigue failure challenges. Concepts exist which overcome these drawbacks by actively controlling the flow, at the cost of increased mechatronical complexity. Here, we propose a bioinspired approach with hyperflexible turbine blades. The rotor naturally adapts to the flow through deformation, reducing flow separation and stall in a passive manner. This results in higher efficiency and increased turbine lifetime through decreased structural loads, without compromising on the simplicity of the design. Graphic abstract
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22

Schramm, Peter, Ramona Schramm, and Michael Knauth. "Abstract TP23: Feasibility Of The Combination Of The Restore ™ Thrombectomy Device And The Reflex ™ Access And Aspiration Catheter For The Treatment Of Acute Ischemic Stroke." Stroke 44, suppl_1 (February 2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/str.44.suppl_1.atp23.

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Introduction: Larger distal access catheter systems for treatment of acute intracranial vessel occlusion enable both clot aspiration and introduction of flow restoration devices. We present the first clinical data of a large lumen hyperflexible intracranial distal aspiration catheter (ReFlex™ 5F, 058” ID x 125cm, Covidien, Irvine, CA) combined with the ReStore™ Thrombectomy microcatheter (Reverse Medical, Irvine, CA) for endovascular treatment of acute ischemic stroke. Patients and Methods: The ReStore™ consists of a flexible, tapered microcatheter with a braided mesh retrieval element attached to its distal segment. The retrieval element is deployed through the advancement of a guidewire or the ReAct™ stylet through the lumen to radially expand the retrieval element. Infusion of rt-PA within the thrombus is possible through small side holes of the ReStore™. Nine patients (62 y - 88 y, 5f/4m) with acute occlusion of the MCA were treated with the combination of ReStore™ and the ReFlex™ aspiration catheter within 6 hours after symptom onset. Median NIHSS score upon arrival was 16 (range 8 - 18). TICI flow in the target vessel segment was assessed prior and after recanalization procedure. Results: Thrombectomy with the combination of ReStore™ and ReFlex™ was performed as initial mechanical treatment in 8 cases. In one case, prior treatment with other stentriever systems failed, whereas the combination of ReStore™ and ReFlex™ lead to TICI 3. TICI 2b or 3 was achieved in 7 patients (77.8%); in 2 patients, TICI 2a was achieved. Immediate flow restoration while activating ReStore™ was accomplished in all 9 cases. Mean time from first angiopgraphy to first perfusion was 39.1 min (range 9-88 min). In 4 cases, additional rt-PA (10 mg) was administered directly into the thrombus through the ReStore™. In 2 cases, subsequent implantation of a permanent intracranial stent was performed. The mean number of ReStore™ activations to achieve final TICI score was 2.2 ± 1.1. One patient experienced periprocedural subarachnoid hemorrhage as a severe adverse event. Conclusion: The combination of ReStore™ and the ReFlex™ aspiration catheter is a promising new treatment option for both flow restoration and aspiration in patients suffering from acute intracranial arterial occlusion.
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