Recent papers on Follow up Periods
Sorted by publication year (newest first) via OpenAlex. List regenerates every 24h.
- 2026
2026 · Dentistry Journal · Brinkmann, Jorge Cortés-Bretón, Bazal-Bonelli, Santiago, Suárez, M et al.
- 2026
2026 · Journal of Cardiology · Ortega, Juan F., García-Camacho, Eva, Gadella-Fernández, Alejandro et al.
- 2026
2026 · International Journal of Infectious Diseases · Lugtu, Eiron John, IV, Delfin Ynigo Pilapil, Cabunoc, Mikhail Harvey et al.
- 2026
2026 · Journal of the American College of Cardiology · Pesevski, Filip, Han, Hui‐Chen, Nerlekar, Nitesh et al.
- 2026
2026 · International Journal of Infectious Diseases · Lugtu, Eiron John, IV, Delfin Ynigo Pilapil, Cabunoc, Mikhail Harvey et al.
- 2026
2026 · DOAJ (DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals) · Yongxin, YANG Juan, LIU Shan, LI Fei, MENG Haodong, QIAO Hui, XIE
- 2025
Summary of follow up periods within the cohort.
2025 · Figshare · (22634076), Don B. Odhiambo, (13267640), Donald Akech, (13267643), Boniface Karia et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (27303), Juha Pekkanen, (762266), Martin Täubel, (689957), Lauri Lehtimäki et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (4500976), Endi Lanza Galvão, (12152812), Janaína de Pina Carvalho, (12152809), Tália Santana Machado de Assis et al.
- 2025
Definition of time periods used to define the cohort and follow-up periods.
2025 · Figshare · (170826), Takeshi Fujiwara, (573887), Constantinos Koshiaris, (112705), Ting Cai et al.
- 2025
2025 · Journal of Psychiatric Research · Tung, Chun-Bin, Liang, Shun-Chin, Sun, Cheuk‐Kwan et al.
- 2025
Timeline of STARLITE trial including Screening, Treatment, and Safety Follow-up Periods.
2025 · Figshare · (22138941), Manav Daftari, (22138944), Christian K. Ramsoomair, (22138947), Daniel Aaronson et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (21702703), Leader Lawanga Ontshick, (19484789), Jepsy Yango, (21702706), Ange Mubiala Yaya et al.
- 2025
2025 · Trauma Violence & Abuse · Lussier, Patrick, McCuish, Evan, St-Pierre, Elisabeth et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (19545165), Minkyeong Lee, (6740516), Byoung Kwon Park, (258396), Dong Hoon Shin et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (10745852), Raakel Luoto, (21464070), Vesa Laatikainen-Raussi, (21464073), Katja E. Mjøsund et al.
- 2025
2025 · Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases · Gatti, Anna, Crisafulli, F., Sottili, Chiara et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (21453824), Maria Smyrli, (21453827), Theodora Oikonomaki, (21453830), Chrysanthi Skalioti et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (21453824), Maria Smyrli, (21453827), Theodora Oikonomaki, (21453830), Chrysanthi Skalioti et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (21453824), Maria Smyrli, (21453827), Theodora Oikonomaki, (21453830), Chrysanthi Skalioti et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (8579439), Viktor Oskarsson, (62543), Veikko Salomaa, (131538), Pekka Jousilahti et al.
- 2025
2025 · Figshare · (20995757), Xiangying Zhu, (20995760), Keying Yang, (4020752), Jinyan Xie et al.
- 2025
2025 · Research Square · Shamsi, Najla, Hamada, Heba, Mcguinness, Alexa et al.
- 2025
This canvas has never been blank: desertscape as a palimpsest (IVth mill. BCE – XXth c. CE): The Eastern Desert underwent major environmental changes during the Holocene. With the end of the African humid period during the mid-Holocene (8,2 - 4,2 ky), it dried out considerably, gradually becoming more and more like the desert we know today. While the origin of its formation is climatic, the evolution of its landscapes and socio-ecosystems owes much to human activities and occupation.This human presence is now quite well documented for the most important peaks in desert occupation, mainly linked to the exploitation of the desert's resources by political and economic powers based in the Nile Valley, or to its place in the trade and expedition roads to the Indian Ocean, the Arabian Peninsula, and the Horn of Africa. These different powers have marked the desert with signs of their presence, their networks, and their appropriation of places, all of which have accumulated, replaced, or cancelled each other out along time. But even in the earliest periods, the canvas has never been blank, because pre-desert occupation left some inheritances and because multi-resource nomadism, which is still insufficiently documented, resulted in other forms of appropriation of the desert areas. This second point is still too often neglected, as the nomads, who were present throughout the period studied, left few traces and the sedentary people did not always account for their interactions with these populations.The paper begins with a brief review of the Holocene climatic history of the Eastern Sahara, followed by a theoretical reflection on the different forms of territorialization and place appropriation that exist among nomadic and sedentary populations. Following these initial overviews, it presents case studies and reflections on the successive and/or simultaneous appropriations, transformations, and reuses of some of the watering places, roads, quarries, harbors, and mines of the Eastern Desert from the end of prehistory to the beginning of the 20th century AD.
2025 · HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe) · Maël, Crépy,
- 2025
2025 · Substance Use Research and Treatment · Narváez‐Camargo, Marta, Mancheño‐Velasco, Cinta, Díaz, Carmen et al.
- 2024
2024 · PubMed · Hanyu, Taketo, Izumi, Takashi, Tanei, Takafumi et al.
- 2024
2024 · BMC Ophthalmology · Zengin, Mehmet Özgür, Güven, Yusuf Ziya, Vural, Mehmet et al.
- 2024
2024 · BMC Infectious Diseases · Endebu, Tamrat, Taye, Girma, Deressa, Wakgari
- 2024
2024 · Shoulder & Elbow · Farzad, Maryam, Jafari, Hassan, MacDermid, Joy C. et al.