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7


Characteristics, Treatment Patterns, and Outcomes in Primary Cutaneous Gamma Delta T Cell Lymphoma (PCGDTCL): A Real World Multi-Institutional Analysis of a Rare Malignancy [Meeting Abstract]

David, Kevin A.; Pulitzer, Melissa; Guitart, Joan; Martinez-Escala, Maria Estela; Geller, Shamir; Wang, Yaqun; Bennani, N. Nora; Ristow, Kay M.; Landsburg, Daniel J.; Winchell, Nicole; Haun, Paul; Allen, Pamela; William, Basem M.; Denlinger, Nathan; Mehta-Shah, Neha; Wilcox, Ryan A.; Hristov, Alexandra; Feldman, Tatyana A.; Weller, Alex; Evens, Andrew M.; Horwitz, Steven M.
ISI:000577164602051
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 5423072

Intercellular competition and levels of development: The plasticity of inevitability [Comment]

Eckhardt, Robert B; Weller, Alex S; Henneberg, Maciej
PMID: 29233948
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 5423022

Reply to Westaway et al.: Mandibular misrepresentations fail to support the invalid species Homo floresiensis [Comment]

Eckhardt, Robert B; Henneberg, Maciej; Chavanaves, Sakdapong; Weller, Alexander S; Hsü, Kenneth J
PMID: 25659744
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 5423032

Rare events in earth history include the LB1 human skeleton from Flores, Indonesia, as a developmental singularity, not a unique taxon

Eckhardt, Robert B; Henneberg, Maciej; Weller, Alex S; Hsü, Kenneth J
The original centrally defining features of "Homo floresiensis" are based on bones represented only in the single specimen LB1. Initial published values of 380-mL endocranial volume and 1.06-m stature are markedly lower than later attempts to confirm them, and facial asymmetry originally unreported, then denied, has been established by our group and later confirmed independently. Of nearly 200 syndromes in which microcephaly is one sign, more than half include asymmetry as another sign and more than one-fourth also explicitly include short stature. The original diagnosis of the putative new species noted and dismissed just three developmental abnormalities. Subsequent independent attempts at diagnosis (Laron Syndrome, Majewski osteodysplastic primordial dwarfism type II, cretinism) have been hampered a priori by selectively restricted access to specimens, and disparaged a posteriori using data previously unpublished, without acknowledging that all of the independent diagnoses corroborate the patent abnormal singularity of LB1. In this report we establish in detail that even in the absence of a particular syndromic diagnosis, the originally defining features of LB1 do not establish either the uniqueness or normality necessary to meet the formal criteria for a type specimen of a new species. In a companion paper we present a new syndromic diagnosis for LB1.
PMID: 25092307
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 5423012

" Homo floresiensis" is LB1 [Meeting Abstract]

Eckhardt, Robert B.; Chavanaves, Sakdapong; Weller, Alexander S.; Henneberg, Maciej
ISI:000331225100212
ISSN: 0002-9483
CID: 5423042

Language in medical documentation [Comment]

Dittmar, W James; Weller, Alex
PMID: 23483165
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 5423062

Abnormal is the new normal: In some paleoanthropological, but not biomedical, research. [Meeting Abstract]

Eckhardt, Robert B.; Weller, Alex; McGrath, Kaitlyn M.; Henneberg, Maciej
ISI:000275295200210
ISSN: 0002-9483
CID: 5423052