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- Publication . Article . 2006Closed AccessAuthors:George Mylonakis; Costis Syngros; George Gazetas; Takashi Tazoh;George Mylonakis; Costis Syngros; George Gazetas; Takashi Tazoh;
doi: 10.1002/eqe.543
Publisher: WileyAn investigation is presented of the collapse of a 630 m segment (Fukae section) of the elevated Hanshin Expressway during the 1995 Kobe earthquake. The earthquake has, from a geotechnical viewpoint, been associated with extensive liquefactions, lateral soil spreading, and damage to waterfront structures. Evidence is presented that soil–structure interaction (SSI) in non-liquefied ground played a detrimental role in the seismic performance of this major structure. The bridge consisted of single circular concrete piers monolithically connected to a concrete deck, founded on groups of 17 piles in layers of loose to dense sands and moderate to stiff clays. There were 18 spans in total, all of which suffered a spectacular pier failure and transverse overturning. Several factors associated with poor structural design have already been identified. The scope of this work is to extend the previous studies by investigating the role of soil in the collapse. The following issues are examined: (1) seismological and geotechnical information pertaining to the site; (2) free-field soil response; (3) response of foundation-superstructure system; (4) evaluation of results against earlier studies that did not consider SSI. Results indicate that the role of soil in the collapse was multiple: First, it modified the bedrock motion so that the frequency content of the resulting surface motion became disadvantageous for the particular structure. Second, the compliance of soil and foundation altered the vibrational characteristics of the bridge and moved it to a region of stronger response. Third, the compliance of the foundation increased the participation of the fundamental mode of the structure, inducing stronger response. It is shown that the increase in inelastic seismic demand in the piers may have exceeded 100% in comparison with piers fixed at the base. These conclusions contradict a widespread view of an always-beneficial role of seismic SSI. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 2019Open AccessAuthors:Morad Aaboud; Alexander Kupco; Stefan Schmitt; Ahmed Bassalat; Matej Melo; Marjorie Shapiro; Grigore Tarna; Till Eifert; Maximiliano Sioli; Nello Bruscino; +816 moreMorad Aaboud; Alexander Kupco; Stefan Schmitt; Ahmed Bassalat; Matej Melo; Marjorie Shapiro; Grigore Tarna; Till Eifert; Maximiliano Sioli; Nello Bruscino; Toshi Sumida; Andrei Snesarev; Edson Carquin; Mohamad Kassem Ayoub; Yanlin Liu; Paolo Mastrandrea; Liaoshan Shi; José Maneira; Daniela Bortoletto; Tatsuya Masubuchi; Danilo Enoque Ferreira de Lima; Joaquin Poveda; Krzysztof Korcyl; Tatiana Lyubushkina; Christian Grefe; Konstantin Toms; Alberto Valero; Antonio Policicchio; Efe Yigitbasi; Sergey Karpov; Pavol Strizenec; Leigh Schaefer; Marcel Vos; Evelin Meoni; Caterina Doglioni; Masahiro Kuze; Katherine Pachal; Davide Costanzo; Giuliano Gustavino; Mateusz Dyndal; Daniele Zanzi; Alexey Ezhilov; Miguel Arratia; David Paul Yallup; Alena Loesle; Liron Barak; Giuseppe Iacobucci; Benedetto Gorini; Harald Fox; Sergio Grancagnolo; Hok Chuen Cheng; Nico Madysa; Joshua Wyatt Smith; Alessandro Tricoli; Michele Faucci Giannelli; Jana Faltova; Stewart Patrick Swift; Mark Oreglia; Francesco De Lorenzi; Ozan Arslan; Hatice Duran Yildiz; Nicolo Vladi Biesuz; Juan Terron; Stefano Camarda; Maximilian Swiatlowski; Nikolaos Konstantinidis; Osamu Jinnouchi; Hartmut Sadrozinski; Yuya Kano; Daniel Camarero Munoz; Fangzhou Zhang; Manuella Vincter; Markus Elsing; Antony Fray; Paolo Massarotti; Lorenzo Rossini; Giulia Di Gregorio; Francois Corriveau; Karel Smolek; Petr Tas; Ana Rosario Cueto Gomez; Brian Petersen; Victor Solovyev; Bijan Haney; Sinead Farrington; Mauro Villa; Vladimir Cindro; Philip Sommer; Shunsuke Honda; M. Franklin; Yang Qin; Knut Zoch; Susumu Oda; Christian Gutschow; Masahiko Saito; Eva Hansen; Matt Zhang; Adam Bailey; Tomas Jakoubek; Matthias Danninger; Serhat Istin; Mazuza Ghneimat; Goeran Jarlskog; Alessandro De Salvo; Yury Smirnov; Alejandro Alonso; Emma Winkels; Emmanuel Le Guirriec; Andrey Ryzhov; Pier-Olivier Deviveiros; Andres Pacheco Pages; Michael Begel; Allen Mincer; Ljiljana Morvaj; Grazia Cabras; Catalin Agheorghiesei; Roland Jansky; Uwe Bratzler; Claire David; Maria Josefina Alconada Verzini; Romain Kukla; Pawel Klimek; Clara Troncon; Francesco Guescini; Juan Antonio Garcia Pascual; Chunhui Chen; Ivo van Vulpen; Elizaveta Shabalina; Guillaume Unal; Yu Zhang; Zhiqing Zhang; Karishma Sekhon; Gabriele Chiodini; Thorwald Klapdor-kleingrothaus; Frederik Ruehr; Liza Mijović; Harish Potti; Scott Snyder; Rostislav Konoplich; Sarah Heim; Giuseppe Lerner; Stefano Veneziano; Andrey Kiryunin; Laura Barranco Navarro; Leonid Serkin; Dengfeng Zhang; Sergei Smirnov; Babar Ali; Andrej Filipcic; Mario Lassnig; Liang Li; Jonathan Butterworth; Melissa Ridel; Geoffrey Mullier; Kun Liu; Christian Ohm; James Shank; Robert Astalos; Eram Rizvi; Eirik Gramstad; Steven Schramm; Yasuhiro Makida; Ana Paula Pereira Peixoto; Cristiano Alpigiani; Qi Zeng; Nabila Wahab Shaikh; Tibor Zenis; Fabio Cardillo; K. K. Gan; Steffen Henkelmann; Stefano Terzo; Ewelina Lobodzinska; Junji Tojo; Louise Heelan; Giancarlo Panizzo; Muhammad Alhroob; Hans Peter Beck; Katharine Leney; Ryan White; Paolo Camarri; Rafal Staszewski; Elena Rocco; John Rutherfoord; L. L. Ma; Giuseppe Avolio; Gianluca Alimonti; Yang Yang; Chaowaroj Wanotayaroj; Luca Colasurdo; Luc Goossens; Nadezda Proklova; Masato Aoki; Yasushi Nagasaka; Petr Andreevich Gorbounov; Simen Hellesund; Jens Weingarten; Marco Valente; Didier Ferrere; Ina Carli; Sofia Chouridou; Hideyuki Oide; Marcello Bindi; Sandro Palestini; Andrea Ventura; Anna Kaczmarska; Tomas Davidek; Monika Wielers; Yang Li; Domizia Orestano; Nico Giangiacomi; Garabed Halladjian; Alessandro La Rosa; Lawrence Lee; Yaquan Fang; Kevin Varvell; Nils-Arne Rosien; Andrew Pilkington; Claus Goessling; Trine Poulsen; Enrico Junior Schioppa; Arnaud Lucotte; Laura Gonella; Esteban Fullana Torregrosa; Katsuo Tokushuku; Ruchika Nayyar; Rosa Simoniello; Tobias Golling; Kristin Lohwasser; Iouri Naryshkin; Vasiliki Kouskoura; Weiming Yao; Simone Michele Mazza; Patrawan Pasuwan; Frank Ellinghaus; Steven Goldfarb; Valerie Susanne Lang; Arwa Bannoura; Judita Mamuzic; Pavel Staroba; Marcela Mikestikova; Tatyana Kharlamova; Emily McDonald; Jian Cong Zeng; Francisco Alonso; Chris Hays; Craig Sawyer; Pawel Bruckman de Renstrom; Carlos Lacasta; Paolo Morettini; Wolfgang Walkowiak; Kyle Cranmer; Kuan-yu Lin; Joseph Reichert; Vincenzo Canale; Saskia Falke; Krzysztof Wozniak; Claire Antel; Joern Lange; Sandro De Cecco; Silvia Biondi; Julien Donini; Bernhard Meirose; James Robinson; Calin Alexa; Sophie Trincaz-Duvoid; Giada Mancini; Carl Suster; Antonio Ereditato; Wade Cameron Fisher; Marina Rotaru; Aidan Grummer; Petr Balek; Nicolas Morange; Per Johansson; Massimo Della Pietra; Riccardo-Maria Bianchi; Alison Lister; Christos Leonidopoulos; Laura Perini; Dirk Sammel; Giuseppe Callea; Miaoran Lu; Marc-Andre Pleier; Vitaliano Chiarella; Mariusz Przybycien; Petr Hamal; Artur Trofymov; Antoine Marzin; Trisha Farooque; Alan Litke; Frank Winklmeier; Mihai Caprini; Christian Weiser; Florencia Luciana Castillo; Helmut Wolters; Iacopo Vivarelli; Jahred Adelman; Wendy Taylor; Ning Zhou; Koji Terashi; Fabio Cerutti; Paul Glaysher; Emma Torró Pastor; Thomas Trefzger; Alexey Zhemchugov; Baptiste Ravina; Rachel Maria Avramidou; Stephen Hillier; Mohammed Ezzi; Sten Hellman; Wing Sheung Chan; Phillip Urquijo; Vakhtang Kartvelishvili; Lorenzo Massa; Benedict Tobias Winter; Fabian Thiele; Oscar Estrada Pastor; Daniel Lellouch; Aliaksei Hrynevich; Spyridon Argyropoulos; Sergey Senkin; Frederic Deliot; Takuya Nobe; Farida Fassi; Sahal Yacoob; Giuseppe Francesco Tartarelli; Anton Wolf; Farid Ould-Saada; Rachik Soualah; Gilberto Giugliarelli; Wenhao Xu; Artem Maevskiy; Christoph Falk Anders; Roberto Di Nardo; Marcus De Beurs; Marilea Reale; Michal Svatos; Yulia Rodina; Dimitrii Krasnopevtsev; Pingchuan Zhao; Marino Romano; Liang Guan; Peter Loch; Giovanna Cottin; Weimin Song; Heather Gray; Martin Nagel; Stephen Burke; Alexander Held; Paul Thompson; Edward Moyse; Jyoti Prakash Biswal; Jorn Grosse-Knetter; Kohei Yorita; Arno Straessner; Elizabeth Gallas; Evgenia Cheremushkina; Evelyn Thomson; Sergio Calvente Lopez; Oxana Smirnova; Bjarne Stugu; Adam Trzupek; Yoram Rozen; Fabien Jeanneau; Sau Lan Wu; Nikita Smirnov; Ryu Sawada; Michel Lefebvre; Ondrej Penc; Alexandra Tudorache; Nicholas Stuart Dann; Tomasz Bold; Ismet Siral; Andreas Kugel; Andrew Mehta; Arnaud Duperrin; Archil Durglishvili; Craig Buttar; Soumya Mohapatra; Claude Leroy; Dominik Derendarz; Pavel Tsiareshka; Trevor Vickey; Claire Gwenlan; Sergey Peleganchuk; Kristian Gregersen; Andreas Warburton; Andrew Blue; Marco Rimoldi; Peter Johannes Falke; Vadim Bednyakov; Fernando Barreiro; Peter Watkins; Mihail Chizhov; Veronica Fabiani; Santiago González de la Hoz; Xiangyang Ju; Klaus Moenig; Sylvain Tisserant; Alessandra Camplani; Krisztian Peters; David DeMarco; Julien Caudron; Ziyu Guo; Michal Marcisovsky; Ming Chung Chu; Juerg Beringer; Edoardo Maria Farina; Hugh Williams; Patrick Czodrowski; Elias Coniavitis; Diane Cinca; Juan Antonio Aguilar Saavedra; Mykhailo Lisovyi; Aaron White; Michal Suk; Michele Livan; Tamar Djobava; Ladislav Chytka; Pierre-Antoine Delsart; Ivan Sykora; Enrico Tassi; Iwona Grabowska-Bold; Sara Alderweireldt; Luigi Longo; Helio Takai; Patricia Conde Muiño; Johannes Erdmann; Anna Lipniacka; Serkant Ali Cetin; Fabrizio Trovato; Javier Montejo Berlingen; Laurent Schoeffel; Asma Hadef; Jiri Hejbal; Alexandros Marantis; Jean-Francois Arguin; Stefan Richter; Cheuk Yee Lo; Magda Anna Chelstowska; Nicola Orlando; Roger Jones; Marc Escalier; Salvatore Bruno; Giulia Gonella; Sarah Jones; Elisabetta Pianori; Maciej Trzebinski; Nicolas Berger; Guenter Duckeck; Dominik Duda; Sebastien Prince; Alison Elliot; Zuzana Rurikova; Khilesh Pradip Mistry; Jaroslav Guenther; Robert Stanek; Diego Casadei; Minghui Liu; Yuta Okazaki; Calliope Louisa Sotiropoulou; Tomoya Iizawa; Victor Araujo Ferraz; Vladimir Tikhomirov; Umberto De Sanctis; Per Edvin Sidebo; Eftychia Tzovara; Dale Charles Abbott; Werner Spolidoro Freund; Alessandro Calandri; Remi Lafaye; James Broughton; Ralf Hertenberger; Giacomo Artoni; Christophe Raymond Goudet; Oliver Ricken; Patrick Rieck; Sandrine Laplace; Sergey Burdin; Rotem Barnea; Ewan Hill; Andre Sopczak; Emmanuel Sauvan; Dominik Krauss; Jonas Strandberg; Salah-eddine Dahbi; Antonios Leisos; Simone Monzani; Kathleen Whalen; Francesco Giuli; Roman Lysak; Paolo Giromini; Leszek Adamczyk; Jason Nielsen; Thomas Koffas; Marcella Bona; Beojan Stanislaus; Gianluca Introzzi; Natascha Savic; Wasikul Islam; Otmar Biebel; Fares Djama; Federico Sforza; Jonathan Bortfeldt; Eleni Myrto Asimakopoulou; Yun Tian; Romain Madar; Phillip Allport; Nicolas Ellis; Jan Godlewski; Jiri Kroll; Benjamin Trocmé; Stephen Watts; Will Davey; Yann Coadou; Wladyslaw Dabrowski; Cristinel Diaconu; Clement Helsens; Hongbo Zhu; Swagato Banerjee; Stephen Lloyd; Alessandra Betti; Peter van Gemmeren; Alberto Aloisio; Vincent Pascuzzi; Driss Benchekroun; Martin Aleksa; Ilija Vukotic; Evgeniy Khramov; James Monk; Michel Vetterli; Marco Vanadia; Takahiko Kondo; Bruno Lenzi; Aleandro Nisati; Gerjan Bobbink; Paul Dervan; Stefania Spagnolo; Dave Charlton; Robert Les; Marcella Capua; Jochen Jens Heinrich; Valentina Tudorache; Stephen Jiggins; Kunlin Han; Shunsuke Adachi; Amy Selvi Tee; Giulio Aielli; Susana Cabrera Urbán; Paolo Calafiura; Pavel Starovoitov; Lorenzo Feligioni; Vladimir Sulin; Meghan Frate; Camilla Di Donato; Ludovic Michel Scyboz; Bakar Chargeishvili; Eric Edward Corrigan; Kendall Reeves; Gideon Bella; Alexandre Rozanov; M. 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Shochet; Ewa Stanecka; Norman Gee; Efstathios Karentzos; Katharina Behr; Jozsef Toth; Peter Onyisi; Remi Zaidan; Tim Michael Heinz Wolf; Fang-ying Tsai; Irinel Caprini; Abraham Seiden; Martina Laura Ojeda; Gonzalo Enrique Orellana; Marcos Vinicius Silva Oliveira; Fabrizio Napolitano; Arka Santra; Jan Kretzschmar; Stefano Rosati; Janet Dietrich; Gen Kawamura; Angel Campoverde; Oleg Brandt; Antinea Guerguichon; James Walder; Torsten Paul Ake Åkesson; Namig Javadov; Milene Calvetti; Louis Guillaume Gagnon; Paul Jackson; Matteo Franchini; Maurizio De Santis; Christian Schmitt; Ren-Jie Wang; Hasko Stenzel; Sebastian Grinstein; Aidan Robson; Paolo Sabatini; Flavia De Almeida Dias; Marco Delmastro; Jeroen Schouwenberg; Song-Ming Wang; Danijela Bogavac; Mikhail Levchenko; Paul Miyagawa; Nataliia Zakharchuk; Valerio Dao; Kerstin Jon-And; Laurent Serin; Andrea Coccaro; Milos Lokajicek; Christos Vergis; Jiangyong Jia; Yusheng Wu; Mathieu Benoit; Georges Azuelos; Markus Cristinziani; Soshi Tsuno; Athanasios Manousos; Yee Chinn Yap; Jos Vermeulen; Sune Jakobsen; Philipp Mogg; Marek Palka; Carl Gwilliam; Osamu Sasaki; Roberto Iuppa; Yohei Yamaguchi; Anjishnu Bandyopadhyay; Philipp Horn; Syed Haider Abidi; Nishu Nishu; Jose Guillermo Panduro Vazquez; Ilia Ravinovich; Uladzimir Kruchonak; Alessia Murrone; Gerald Oakham; Annick Lleres; Nathalie Besson; Matthias Saimpert; Janusz Chwastowski; Marco Sessa; Takanori Kono; Jens Janssen; Antonio Onofre; Arthur Eugen Bolz; Nikolina Ilic; Jolanta Olszowska; Elisabeth Schopf; Vakhtang Tsulaia; Nicolin Govender; Martine Bosman; Danuta Kisielewska; Ilkay Turk Cakir; Victor Maleev; Michele Pinamonti; Marta Losada; Marija Vranjes Milosavljevic; Lee Sawyer; Joaquin Hoya; Caterina Marcon; Victor Kukhtin; Georges Aad; Hyungsuk Son; Michaela Queitsch-Maitland; George Redlinger; Fred Wickens; Ki Lie; Marcel Weirich; Matteo Negrini; Filipe Veloso; Sabrina Groh; Lucia Masetti; Thomas Billoud; Akshat Puri; Francesco Maria Follega; Vadim Gratchev; Tadej Novak; Nektarios Benekos; Miguel Villaplana Perez; Henri Bachacou; Alessandro Cerri; Massimo Lazzaroni; Edward Diehl; Jan-Hendrik Arling; Julie Kirk; Andrey Kamenshchikov; Rui Wang; Ruggero Turra; Andrea Knue; Steven Worm; Hajime Nanjo; Christian Oliver Sander; Eduard Simioni; Hongtao Yang; Matteo Scornajenghi; Valerio Vercesi; Lewis James Armitage; Khalil Bouaouda; Sigve Haug; Christina Potter; Fuqiang Wang; Benoit Lefebvre; Aparajita Dattagupta; Sourav Sen; Hans-Christian Schultz-Coulon; Yuji Yamazaki; Peter Berta; Murrough Landon; Fabrice Hubaut; Leonid Kurchaninov; Dimitrios Iliadis; Alexey Anisenkov; Yanjun Tu; Richard Keeler; Stanislav Nemecek; Frank Filthaut; Guennadi Borissov; Amal Vaidya; Laurent Chevalier; Veronika Magerl; Paola Giannetti; Orhan Cakir; Tomohiro Yamazaki; Javier Llorente Merino; Geoffrey Taylor; Anatoli Romaniouk; Alberto Stabile; Stamatios Gkaitatzis; Evgenii Baldin; Serhat Oerdek; Paul Mircea Gravila; Nikola Makovec; Marzieh Bahmani; Konstantinos Bachas; Konstantinos Nikolopoulos; Oliver Majersky; Elliot Reynolds; Troels Petersen; Oldrich Kepka; Maximilian Hils; Francesco Ragusa; Haifeng Li; Stephen Gibson; Aimilianos Koulouris; Teng Jian Khoo; Alexi Gongadze; Robert McPherson; Daniel Muenstermann; Jeffrey David Shahinian; Bruce Yabsley; Kilian Rosbach; Philipp Stolte; Tamara Vazquez Schroeder; Royer Edson Ticse Torres; Andrew D. Hamilton; Siqi Yang; Claudia Glasman; Tigran Mkrtchyan; Theodoros Alexopoulos; Paul Philipp Gadow; Leonor Cerda Alberich; Riccardo Vari; Debarati Roy; Tomas Dado; Dave Britton; Vojtech Pleskot; Yuri Kulchitsky; Margherita Primavera; Konstantinos Ntekas; Minyu Feng; Thorsten Wengler; Deepak Kar; Jianming Qian; Frank Merritt; Shyam Balaji; Lydia Brenner; Xin Wu; Nikiforos Nikiforou; Jiri Chudoba; Andrea Formica; Michal Dubovsky; Christos Anastopoulos; James Mueller; Francesca Ungaro; Jonathan David Bossio Sola; Elvedin Tahirovic; Torre Wenaus; Giulio Cornelio Grossi; Abhishek Sharma; Evangelos Kourlitis; Craig Wiglesworth; Antonio Salvucci; Bingxuan Liu; Pascal Pralavorio; Valerio Ippolito; Laura Fabbri; Lydia Roos; Stefania Xella; Radek Novotny; David Lynn; Elizabeth Brost; Martin White; Andrzej Olszewski; Nenad Vranjes; Lamberto Luminari; Peter Kodys; Tim Adye; John Baines; Lara Katharina Schildgen; Adriaan Koenig; Tristan Beau; Lily Asquith; Maria Smizanska; Mattias Ellert; Zoya Karpova; Othmane Rifki; Gunnar Jakel; Walter Hopkins; Werner Wiedenmann; Kazunori Hanagaki; Eric Lancon; Andrzej Smykiewicz; Christine Kourkoumelis; Jana Schaarschmidt;Publisher: American Physical Society (APS)Project: NSERC
A measurement of the associated production of a top-quark pair (tt) with a vector boson (W, Z) in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV is presented, using 36.1 fb-1 of integrated luminosity collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Events are selected in channels with two same- or opposite-sign leptons (electrons or muons), three leptons or four leptons, and each channel is further divided into multiple regions to maximize the sensitivity of the measurement. The ttZ and ttW production cross sections are simultaneously measured using a combined fit to all regions. The best-fit values of the production cross sections are σttZ=0.95±0.08stat±0.10syst pb and σttW=0.87±0.13stat±0.14syst pb in agreement with the Standard Model predictions. The measurement of the ttZ cross section is used to set constraints on effective field theory operators which modify the ttZ vertex.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 2003Open AccessAuthors:Schellenberg, D; Armstrong Schellenberg, J R M; Mushi, A; Savigny de, D; Mgalula, L; Mbuya, C; Victoria, C.G.;Schellenberg, D; Armstrong Schellenberg, J R M; Mushi, A; Savigny de, D; Mgalula, L; Mbuya, C; Victoria, C.G.;Country: Tanzania (United Republic of)
Objective was to document the prevalence, age-distribution, and risk factors for anaemia in Tanzanian children less than 5 years old,thereby assisting in the development of effective strategies for controlling anaemia. Cluster sampling was used to identify 2417 households at random from four contiguous districts in south-eastern United Republic of Tanzania in mid-1999. Data on various social and medical parameters were collected and analysed. Blood haemoglobin concentrations (Hb) were available for 1979 of the 2131 (93%) children identified and ranged from 1.7 to 18.6 g/dl. Overall, 87% (1722) of children had an Hb <11 g/dl, 39% (775) had an Hb <8 g/dl and 3% (65) had an Hb <5 g/dl. The highest prevalence of anaemia of all three levels was in children aged 6–11 months, of whom 10% (22/226) had an Hb <5 g/dl. However, the prevalence of anaemia was already high in children aged 1–5 months (85% had an Hb <11 g/dl, 42% had an Hb <8 g/dl, and 6% had an Hb <5 g/dl). Anaemia was usually asymptomatic and when symptoms arose they were nonspecific and rarely identified as a serious illness by the care provider. A recent history of treatment with antimalarials and iron was rare. Compliance with vaccinations delivered through the Expanded Programme of Immunization (EPI) was 82% and was notassociated with risk of anaemia. Anaemia is extremely common in south-eastern United Republic of Tanzania, even in very young infants. Further implementation of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness algorithm should improve the case management of anaemia. However, the asymptomatic nature of most episodes of anaemia highlights the need for preventive strategies. The EPI has good coverage of the target population and it may be an appropriate channel for delivering tools for controlling anaemia and malaria.
- Publication . Article . 2012Closed AccessAuthors:Hongju Cheng; Naixue Xiong; Athanasios V. Vasilakos; Laurence T. Yang; Guolong Chen; Xiaofang Zhuang;Hongju Cheng; Naixue Xiong; Athanasios V. Vasilakos; Laurence T. Yang; Guolong Chen; Xiaofang Zhuang;Publisher: Elsevier BV
The wireless mesh network is a new emerging broadband technology providing the last-mile Internet access for mobile users by exploiting the advantage of multiple radios and multiple channels. The throughput improvement of the network relies heavily on the utilizing the orthogonal channels. However, an improper channel assignment scheme may lead to network partition or links failure. In this paper we consider the assignment strategy with topology preservation by organizing the mesh nodes with available channels, and aim at minimizing the co-channel interference in the network. The channel assignment with the topology preservation is proved to be NP-hard and to find the optimized solution in polynomial time is impossible. We have formulated a channel assignment algorithm named as DPSO-CA which is based on the discrete particle swarm optimization and can be used to find the approximate optimized solution. We have shown that our algorithm can be easily extended to the case with uneven traffic load in the network. The impact of radio utilization during the channel assignment process is discussed too. Extensive simulation results have demonstrated that our algorithm has good performance in both dense and sparse networks compared with related works.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Preprint . 2014Open AccessAuthors:T. Aaltonen; Ronen Alon; A. Anastassov; Giorgio Apollinari; Tetsuo Arisawa; A. Artikov; J. Asaadi; A. Barbaro-Galtieri; Virgil E Barnes; B. A. Barnett; +210 moreT. Aaltonen; Ronen Alon; A. Anastassov; Giorgio Apollinari; Tetsuo Arisawa; A. Artikov; J. Asaadi; A. Barbaro-Galtieri; Virgil E Barnes; B. A. Barnett; P. Barria; Pavol Bartos; Matteo Bauce; Franco Bedeschi; Giovanni Bellettini; Douglas Benjamin; K. R. Bland; Daniela Bortoletto; L. Brigliadori; C. Bromberg; Erik Brücken; H. S. Budd; G. Busetto; P. J. Bussey; Pierfrancesco Butti; Adrian Buzatu; Aristotle Calamba; Stefano Camarda; B. Carls; Rodolfo Carosi; B. Casal; Massimo Casarsa; P. Catastini; D. Cauz; Alessandro Cerri; Lucio Cerrito; Maxwell Chertok; Giorgio Chiarelli; Keunchang Cho; D. Chokheli; Allan G Clark; M. E. Convery; D. J. Cox; Javier Cuevas; Nicola D'Ascenzo; M. Datta; A. Di Canto; B. Di Ruzza; Jay Dittmann; M. Dorigo; Ehud Duchovni; Ryan Christopher Edgar; A. Elagin; Robin Erbacher; S. Errede; Sinead Farrington; G. Flanagan; J. C. Freeman; Henry J. Frisch; Y. Funakoshi; P. Garosi; H. Gerberich; E. Gerchtein; Stefano Giagu; C. M. Ginsburg; D. Goldin; Gervasio Gomez; O. Gonzalez Lopez; A. T. Goshaw; K. Goulianos; E. Gramellini; S. R. Hahn; Kazuhiko Hara; R. F. Harr; Kenichi Hatakeyama; Chris Hays; Jochen Jens Heinrich; Matthew Herndon; A. Hocker; Ziqing Hong; S. R. Hou; R. E. Hughes; M. Hussein; Gianluca Introzzi; Andrew Ivanov; E. James; D. W. Jang; E. J. Jeon; M. Jones; S. Y. Jun; M. Kambeitz; P. E. Karchin; Azeddine Kasmi; Y. Kato; W. Ketchum; J. Keung; Benjamin Kilminster; D. H. Kim; H. S. Kim; J. E. Kim; S. H. Kim; Naoki Kimura; M. Kirby; K. Kondo; Jacobo Konigsberg; Michal Kreps; Joe Kroll; M. Kurata; M. Lancaster; Kevin Lannon; Giuseppe Latino; J. S. H. Lee; J. D. Lewis; Antonio Limosani; Elliot Lipeles; Alison Lister; Hongfang Liu; A. Loginov; J. Lueck; P. Lukens; J. Lys; Roman Lysak; R. Madrak; Paolo Maestro; Saransh Malik; Luigi Marchese; Fabrizio Margaroli; P. Marino; K. Matera; A. Mazzacane; P. Mazzanti; C. Mesropian; T. Miao; D. Mietlicki; A. Mitra; S. Moed; C. S. Moon; Roger Moore; M. J. Morello; A. Mukherjee; P. Murat; Yasuyoshi Nagai; J. Naganoma; C. Neu; T. Nigmanov; L. Nodulman; L. Oakes; I. Oksuzian; L. Ortolan; C. Pagliarone; E. Palencia; Prabhakar Palni; Manfred Paulini; Christoph Paus; Elisabetta Pianori; Justin Pilot; L. Pondrom; A. Pranko; Fedor Prokoshin; F. Ptohos; I. Redondo Fernández; P. B. Renton; M. Rescigno; Luciano Ristori; Aidan Robson; T. Rodriguez; Mauro Ronzani; Jonathan L. Rosner; V. Rusu; Koji Sato; V. Saveliev; P. Schlabach; Thomas Andrew Schwarz; Luca Scodellaro; Sally Seidel; Y. Seiya; A. Semenov; Federico Sforza; Shalhout Shalhout; Tara Shears; M. J. Shochet; I. Shreyber-Tecker; A. Simonenko; Hao Song; M. Stancari; D. Stentz; A. Sukhanov; I. Suslov; K. Takemasa; Y. Takeuchi; Jian Tang; K. Tollefson; S. Torre; D. Torretta; Fumihiko Ukegawa; G. Velev; Caterina Vernieri; R. Vilar; Marcelo Vogel; G. Volpi; Peter Wagner; R. Wallny; D. Waters; A. B. Wicklund; Scott Wilbur; H. H. Williams; J. S. Wilson; P. Wilson; Brian L Winer; T. Wright; Xin Wu; Zhenbin Wu; Koji Yamamoto; T. Yang; U. K. Yang; Yang Yang; W-M. Yao; K. Yi; Kohei Yorita; Anna Zanetti;
handle: 11384/59663 , 10261/140220
Publisher: American Physical SocietyCountries: Spain, Spain, ItalyProject: EC | TAUKITFORNEWPHYSICS (302103), NSERC , SNSF | Measurements of Higgs bos... (153664)This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and National Science Foundation; the Italian Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare; the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan; the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; the National Science Council of the Republic of China; the Swiss National Science Foundation; the A. P. Sloan Foundation; the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, Germany; the Korean World Class University Program, the National Research Foundation of Korea; the Science and Technology Facilities Council and the Royal Society, United Kingdom; the Russian Foundation for Basic Research; the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, and Programa Consolider-Ingenio 2010, Spain; the Slovak R&D Agency; the Academy of Finland; the Australian Research Council (ARC); and the EU community Marie Curie Fellowship Contract No. 302103. This work was also supported by the Shrum Foundation, the Weizman Institute of Science and the Israel Science Foundation. Results of a study of the substructure of the highest transverse momentum (pT) jets observed by the CDF Collaboration are presented. Events containing at least one jet with pT>400 GeV/c in a sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5.95 fb−1, collected in 1.96 TeV proton-antiproton collisions at the Fermilab Tevatron collider, are selected. A study of the jet mass, angularity, and planar-flow distributions is presented, and the measurements are compared with predictions of perturbative quantum chromodynamics. A search for boosted top-quark production is also described, leading to a 95% confidence level upper limit of 38 fb on the production cross section of top quarks with pT>400 GeV/c. Peer Reviewed et al.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 2018Open Access EnglishAuthors:Claudio Maffeis; Niels H Birkebaek; Maia Konstantinova; Anke Schwandt; Andriani Vazeou; Kristina Casteels; Sujata M Jali; Catarina Limbert; Auste Pundziute-Lycka; Péter Tóth-Heyn; +13 moreClaudio Maffeis; Niels H Birkebaek; Maia Konstantinova; Anke Schwandt; Andriani Vazeou; Kristina Casteels; Sujata M Jali; Catarina Limbert; Auste Pundziute-Lycka; Péter Tóth-Heyn; Carine de Beaufort; Zdenek Sumnik; Valentino Cherubini; Jannet Svensson; Danièle Pacaud; Christina Kanaka-Gantenbein; Shlomit Shalitin; Natasa Bratina; Ragnar Hanas; Guy T. Alonso; Luxmi Poran; Ana L Pereira; Marco Marigliano;
doi: 10.1111/pedi.12730
handle: 10400.17/3630
Publisher: WileyCountry: PortugalOBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of underweight (UW), overweight (OW), and obesity in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D).METHODS: An international cross-sectional study including 23 026 T1D children (2-18 years, duration of diabetes ≥1 year) participating in the SWEET prospective, multicenter diabetes registry. Body mass index SD score (BMI-SDS) was calculated using the World Health Organization BMI charts. Children were categorized as UW (BMI-SDS < -2SD), OW (+1SD < BMI-SDS ≤ +2SD), and obese (OB) (BMI-SDS > +2SD). Hierarchic regression models were applied with adjustment for sex, age, and duration of diabetes.RESULTS: The prevalence of UW, OW, and obesity was: 1.4%, 22.3%, and 7.3% in males and 0.6%, 27.2%, and 6.8% in females. Adjusted BMI-SDS was significantly higher in females than in males (mean ± SEM: 0.54 ± 0.05 vs 0.40 ± 0.05, P < 0.0001). In males, BMI-SDS significantly decreased by age (P < 0.0001) in the first three age categories 0.61 ± 0.06 (2 to <10 years), 0.47 ± 0.06 (10 to <13 years), 0.34 ± 0.05 (13 to <16 years). In females, BMI-SDS showed a U-shaped distribution by age (P < 0.0001): 0.54 ± 0.04 (2 to <10 years), 0.39 ± 0.04 (10 to <13 years), 0.55 ± 0.04 (13 to <16 years). BMI-SDS increased by diabetes duration (<2 years: 0.38 ± 0.05, 2 to <5 years: 0.44 ± 0.05, and ≥5 years: 0.50 ± 0.05, P < 0.0001). Treatment modality did not affect BMI-SDS. Adjusted HbA1c was significantly higher in females than in males (8.20% ± 0.10% vs 8.06% ± 0.10%, P < 0.0001). In both genders, the association between HbA1c and BMI-SDS was U-shaped with the highest HbA1c in the UW and obesity groups.CONCLUSIONS: The high rate of OW and obesity (31.8%) emphasize the need for developing further strategies to prevent and treat excess fat accumulation in T1D.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Preprint . Other literature type . 2013Open Access EnglishAuthors:Sarah E. Medland; Jaime Derringer; Jian Yang; Tõnu Esko; Nicolas W. Martin; Konstantin Shakhbazov; Abdel Abdellaoui; Arpana Agrawal; Eva Albrecht; Behrooz Z. Alizadeh; +173 moreSarah E. Medland; Jaime Derringer; Jian Yang; Tõnu Esko; Nicolas W. Martin; Konstantin Shakhbazov; Abdel Abdellaoui; Arpana Agrawal; Eva Albrecht; Behrooz Z. Alizadeh; Najaf Amin; John Barnard; Kelly S. Benke; Lawrence F. Bielak; Jeffrey A. Boatman; Patricia A. Boyle; Gail Davies; Christiaan de Leeuw; Niina Eklund; Daniel S. Evans; Rudolf Ferhmann; Krista Fischer; Christian Gieger; Håkon K. Gjessing; Sara Hägg; Jennifer R. Harris; Caroline Hayward; Christina Holzapfel; Erik Ingelsson; Bo Jacobsson; Peter K. Joshi; Astanand Jugessur; Marika Kaakinen; Stavroula Kanoni; Juha Karjalainen; Ivana Kolcic; Kati Kristiansson; Zoltán Kutalik; Jari Lahti; Sang Hong Lee; Peng Lin; Penelope A. Lind; Yongmei Liu; Kurt Lohman; Marisa Loitfelder; George McMahon; Pedro Marques Vidal; Osorio Meirelles; Lili Milani; Marja-Liisa Nuotio; Christopher Oldmeadow; Katja Petrovic; Wouter J. Peyrot; Ozren Polasek; Lydia Quaye; Eva Reinmaa; John P. Rice; Thais S. Rizzi; Helena Schmidt; Reinhold Schmidt; Albert V. Smith; Jennifer A. Smith; Toshiko Tanaka; Antonio Terracciano; Matthijs J. H. M. van der Loos; Veronique Vitart; Henry Völzke; Jürgen Wellmann; Lei Yu; Jüri Allik; Stefania Bandinelli; François Bastardot; Jonathan P. Beauchamp; David A. Bennett; Klaus Berger; Dorret I. Boomsma; Ute Bültmann; Harry Campbell; Christopher F. Chabris; Lynn Cherkas; Francesco Cucca; Mariza de Andrade; Philip L. De Jager; Ian J. Deary; George Dedoussis; Panos Deloukas; Maria Dimitriou; Martin F. Elderson; Johan G. Eriksson; David M. Evans; Jessica D. Faul; Luigi Ferrucci; Melissa E. Garcia; Henrik Grönberg; Vilmundur Guonason; Per Hall; Juliette Harris; Tamara B. Harris; Nicholas D. Hastie; Andrew C. Heath; Dena G. Hernandez; Wolfgang Hoffmann; Adriaan Hofman; Rolf Holle; Jouke-Jan Hottenga; William G. Iacono; Thomas Illig; Mika Kähönen; Jaakko Kaprio; Robert M. Kirkpatrick; Matthew Kowgier; Antti Latvala; Lenore J. Launer; Debbie A Lawlor; Terho Lehtimäki; Jingmei Li; Paul Lichtenstein; Peter Lichtner; David C. Liewald; Patrik K. E. Magnusson; Tomi E. Mäkinen; Marco Masala; Matt McGue; Andres Metspalu; Andreas Mielck; Grant W. Montgomery; Sutapa Mukherjee; Dale R. Nyholt; Ben A. Oostra; Lyle J. Palmer; Aarno Palotie; Markus Perola; Patricia A. Peyser; Martin Preisig; Katri Räikkönen; Olli T. Raitakari; Anu Realo; Susan M. Ring; Samuli Ripatti; Fernando Rivadeneira; Igor Rudan; Veikko Salomaa; Antti-Pekka Sarin; David Schlessinger; Rodney J. Scott; Harold Snieder; Beate St Pourcain; John M. Starr; Ida Surakka; Rauli Svento; Alexander Teumer; Henning Tiemeier; Frank J. A. van Rooij; David R. Van Wagoner; Erkki Vartiainen; Peter Vollenweider; Judith M. Vonk; Gérard Waeber; David R. Weir; H.-Erich Wichmann; Elisabeth Widen; Gonneke Willemsen; James F. Wilson; Alan F. Wright; George Davey-Smith; Lude Franke; Patrick J. F. Groenen; Albert Hofman; Magnus Johannesson; Sharon L.R. Kardia; Robert F. Krueger; David Laibson; Nicholas G. Martin; Michelle N. Meyer; Danielle Posthuma; Roy Thurik; Nicholas J. Timpson; André G. Uitterlinden; Cornelia M. van Duijn; Peter M. Visscher; Daniel J. Benjamin; David Cesarini; Philipp Koellinger;
pmc: PMC3751588
pmid: 23722424
handle: 1871.1/0963b7a9-27a9-4cbb-a429-bffdbd58c1fa , 1887/101982 , 2066/117012 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A56-B , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A59-5 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A58-7 , 20.500.11820/0f76c4b9-f0ef-4512-a24c-ab2e8cb936ff , 1765/67851 , 11370/2e7ff532-5bad-44e5-b550-7d865be1c523 , 11245/1.410713 , 11541.2/131178
pmc: PMC3751588
pmid: 23722424
handle: 1871.1/0963b7a9-27a9-4cbb-a429-bffdbd58c1fa , 1887/101982 , 2066/117012 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A56-B , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A59-5 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A58-7 , 20.500.11820/0f76c4b9-f0ef-4512-a24c-ab2e8cb936ff , 1765/67851 , 11370/2e7ff532-5bad-44e5-b550-7d865be1c523 , 11245/1.410713 , 11541.2/131178
Countries: Netherlands, United States, United Kingdom, Croatia, AustraliaProject: WT , NIH | FINANCIAL STATUS--RETIREM... (2P01AG005842-04), NIH | ECONOMICS OF AGING TRAINI... (5T32AG000186-10), EC | DEVHEALTH (269874), NSF | EAGER Proposal: Workshop ... (1064089), EC | GMI (230374), NIH | NBER Center for Aging and... (5P30AG012810-15)A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of educational attainment was conducted in a discovery sample of 101,069 individuals and a replication sample of 25,490. Three independent single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are genome-wide significant (rs9320913, rs11584700, rs4851266), and all three replicate. Estimated effects sizes are small (coefficient of determination R2 ≈ 0.02%), approximately 1 month of schooling per allele. A linear polygenic score from all measured SNPs accounts for ≈2% of the variance in both educational attainment and cognitive function. Genes in the region of the loci have previously been associated with health, cognitive, and central nervous system phenotypes, and bioinformatics analyses suggest the involvement of the anterior caudate nucleus. These findings provide promising candidate SNPs for follow-up work, and our effect size estimates can anchor power analyses in social-science genetics. Economics
Substantial popularitySubstantial popularity In top 1%Substantial influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Substantial influence In top 1%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Other literature type . 2019Open AccessAuthors:Jürgen Dengler; Thomas J. Matthews; Manuel J. Steinbauer; Sebastian Wolfrum; Steffen Boch; Alessandro Chiarucci; Timo Conradi; Iwona Dembicz; Corrado Marcenò; Itziar García-Mijangos; +35 moreJürgen Dengler; Thomas J. Matthews; Manuel J. Steinbauer; Sebastian Wolfrum; Steffen Boch; Alessandro Chiarucci; Timo Conradi; Iwona Dembicz; Corrado Marcenò; Itziar García-Mijangos; Arkadiusz Nowak; David Storch; Werner Ulrich; Juan Antonio Campos; Laura Cancellieri; Marta Carboni; Giampiero Ciaschetti; Pieter De Frenne; Jiri Dolezal; Christian Dolnik; Franz Essl; Edy Fantinato; Goffredo Filibeck; John-Arvid Grytnes; Riccardo Guarino; Behlül Güler; Monika Janišová; Ewelina Klichowska; Łukasz Kozub; Anna Kuzemko; Michael Manthey; Anne Mimet; Alireza Naqinezhad; Christian Pedersen; Robert K. Peet; Vincent Pellissier; Remigiusz Pielech; Giovanna Potenza; Leonardo Rosati; Massimo Terzi; Orsolya Valkó; Denys Vynokurov; Hannah J. White; Manuela Winkler; Idoia Biurrun;
handle: 1854/LU-8649698 , 1956/22574 , 11104/0312153 , 10400.3/5794 , 11590/363767
Publisher: WileyCountries: Italy, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Italy, Germany, Spain, Poland, Norway, Switzerland ...Aim Species-area relationships (SARs) are fundamental scaling laws in ecology although their shape is still disputed. At larger areas, power laws best represent SARs. Yet, it remains unclear whether SARs follow other shapes at finer spatial grains in continuous vegetation. We asked which function describes SARs best at small grains and explored how sampling methodology or the environment influence SAR shape. Location Palaearctic grasslands and other non-forested habitats. Taxa Vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens. Methods We used the GrassPlot database, containing standardized vegetation-plot data from vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens spanning a wide range of grassland types throughout the Palaearctic and including 2,057 nested-plot series with at least seven grain sizes ranging from 1 cm(2) to 1,024 m(2). Using nonlinear regression, we assessed the appropriateness of different SAR functions (power, power quadratic, power breakpoint, logarithmic, Michaelis-Menten). Based on AICc, we tested whether the ranking of functions differed among taxonomic groups, methodological settings, biomes or vegetation types. Results The power function was the most suitable function across the studied taxonomic groups. The superiority of this function increased from lichens to bryophytes to vascular plants to all three taxonomic groups together. The sampling method was highly influential as rooted presence sampling decreased the performance of the power function. By contrast, biome and vegetation type had practically no influence on the superiority of the power law. Main conclusions We conclude that SARs of sessile organisms at smaller spatial grains are best approximated by a power function. This coincides with several other comprehensive studies of SARs at different grain sizes and for different taxa, thus supporting the general appropriateness of the power function for modelling species diversity over a wide range of grain sizes. The poor performance of the Michaelis-Menten function demonstrates that richness within plant communities generally does not approach any saturation, thus calling into question the concept of minimal area. We thank all vegetation scientists who carefully collected multi‐ scale plant diversity data from Palaearctic Grasslands available in GrassPlot. The Eurasian Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) and the International Association for Vegetation Science (IAVS) sup‐ ported the EDGG Field Workshops, which generated a core part of the GrassPlot data. The Bavarian Research Alliance (grant BayIntAn_UBT_2017_58) and the Bayreuth Center of Ecology and Environmental Research (BayCEER) funded the initial GrassPlot workshop during which the database was established and the cur‐ rent paper was initiated. A.N. acknowledges support by the Center for International Scientific Studies and Collaboration (CISSC), Iran. C.M., I.B., I.G.‐M and J.A.C. were funded by the Basque Government (IT936‐16). D.V. carried out the research supported by a grant of the State Fund For Fundamental Research Ф83/53427. G.F. carried out the research in the frame of the MIUR initiative ‘Department of excellence' (Law 232/2016). I.D. was supported by the Polish National Science Centre (grant DEC‐2013/09/N/NZ8/03234). J.Do. was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (GA 17‐19376S). M.J. was supported by grant by Slovak Academy of Sciences (VEGA 02/0095/19). W.U. ac‐ knowledges support from the Polish National Science Centre (grant 2017/27/B/NZ8/00316).
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Conference object . 2013Open AccessAuthors:T. Joergensen; Thomas Graven-Nielsen; S. Rosager; L. Klokker; Karen Ellegaard; B. Danneskiold-Samsoee; Henning Bliddal; Marius Henriksen;T. Joergensen; Thomas Graven-Nielsen; S. Rosager; L. Klokker; Karen Ellegaard; B. Danneskiold-Samsoee; Henning Bliddal; Marius Henriksen;Publisher: Elsevier BVCountry: Denmark
s / Osteoarthritis and Cartilage 21 (2013) S63–S312 S268 bunionectomy with osteotomy and fixation under regional anesthesia. Patients with a pain intensity rating of 40mm on a 100mm Visual Analog Scale (VAS) were randomized to receive indomethacin submicron particle capsules (40mg TID or BID or 20mg TID), celecoxib (400mg loading dose; 200mg BID), or placebo. The primary endpoint was the summed pain intensity difference measured by VAS over 48 hrs (VAS SPID-48). Results: Of the 462 patients enrolled, most (83.1%) were women with a mean age of 41.2 ( 12.5) years. Indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (509.6 91.9), 40mg BID (328.0 92.9), and 20mg TID (380.5 92.9) reduced pain (VAS SPID-48; P 0.046 for all 3 groups) compared with placebo (67.8 91.4; Figure). Although there was some evidence of analgesia for celecoxib (279.4 91.9) VAS SPID-48 did not achieve statistical significance compared with placebo. Indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (30.7; P1⁄40.013) and 40mg BID (29.8; P1⁄40.014) achieved better pain control over 4 hrs after study entry (VAS SPID-4) compared to placebo (8.9). Similarly, indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (2.5; P1⁄40.003) and 40mg BID (2.1; P1⁄40.022) provided greater total pain relief over 4 hrs after study entry (TOTPAR-4) compared with placebo (1.2). Some evidence of pain control was observed as early as 30 min (VAS SPID) in the indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (2.9) and 40mg BID (2.6) groups compared with placebo (0.2). AEs were generally similar across treatment groups and included nausea, localized post-procedural edema, dizziness, and headache. ĂConclusions: In this study, investigational lower-dose, indomethacin submicron particle capsules provided effective pain control compared with placebo in a post-surgical model of moderate to severe acute pain. Indomethacin submicron particle capsules are a potentially promising option for patients with acute pain. 520 ACUTE AND SHORT-TERM EFFECTS OF INTRA-ARTICULAR KNEE PAIN RELIEF ON PAIN SENSITIZATION IN KNEE OA: A COHORT STUDY T. Joergensen y, T. Graven-Nielsen z, S. Rosager y, L. Klokker y, K. Ellegaard y, B. Danneskiold-Samsoee y, H. Bliddal y, M. Henriksen y. y The Parker Inst., Dept. of Rheumatology, Copenhagen Univ.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 1998Authors:Ibrahim Assem; Nikolaos Marmaridis;Ibrahim Assem; Nikolaos Marmaridis;Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Let a finite dimensional algebra R be a split extension of an algebra A by a nilpotent bimodule Q. We give necessary and sufficient conditions for a (partial) tilting module TA to be such that T⊗A RR is a (partial) tilting module. If this is not the case, but QA is generated by the tilting module TA , then there exists a quotient [Rbar] of R such that T⊗A [Rbar][Rbar] is a tilting module.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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- Publication . Article . 2006Closed AccessAuthors:George Mylonakis; Costis Syngros; George Gazetas; Takashi Tazoh;George Mylonakis; Costis Syngros; George Gazetas; Takashi Tazoh;
doi: 10.1002/eqe.543
Publisher: WileyAn investigation is presented of the collapse of a 630 m segment (Fukae section) of the elevated Hanshin Expressway during the 1995 Kobe earthquake. The earthquake has, from a geotechnical viewpoint, been associated with extensive liquefactions, lateral soil spreading, and damage to waterfront structures. Evidence is presented that soil–structure interaction (SSI) in non-liquefied ground played a detrimental role in the seismic performance of this major structure. The bridge consisted of single circular concrete piers monolithically connected to a concrete deck, founded on groups of 17 piles in layers of loose to dense sands and moderate to stiff clays. There were 18 spans in total, all of which suffered a spectacular pier failure and transverse overturning. Several factors associated with poor structural design have already been identified. The scope of this work is to extend the previous studies by investigating the role of soil in the collapse. The following issues are examined: (1) seismological and geotechnical information pertaining to the site; (2) free-field soil response; (3) response of foundation-superstructure system; (4) evaluation of results against earlier studies that did not consider SSI. Results indicate that the role of soil in the collapse was multiple: First, it modified the bedrock motion so that the frequency content of the resulting surface motion became disadvantageous for the particular structure. Second, the compliance of soil and foundation altered the vibrational characteristics of the bridge and moved it to a region of stronger response. Third, the compliance of the foundation increased the participation of the fundamental mode of the structure, inducing stronger response. It is shown that the increase in inelastic seismic demand in the piers may have exceeded 100% in comparison with piers fixed at the base. These conclusions contradict a widespread view of an always-beneficial role of seismic SSI. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 2019Open AccessAuthors:Morad Aaboud; Alexander Kupco; Stefan Schmitt; Ahmed Bassalat; Matej Melo; Marjorie Shapiro; Grigore Tarna; Till Eifert; Maximiliano Sioli; Nello Bruscino; +816 moreMorad Aaboud; Alexander Kupco; Stefan Schmitt; Ahmed Bassalat; Matej Melo; Marjorie Shapiro; Grigore Tarna; Till Eifert; Maximiliano Sioli; Nello Bruscino; Toshi Sumida; Andrei Snesarev; Edson Carquin; Mohamad Kassem Ayoub; Yanlin Liu; Paolo Mastrandrea; Liaoshan Shi; José Maneira; Daniela Bortoletto; Tatsuya Masubuchi; Danilo Enoque Ferreira de Lima; Joaquin Poveda; Krzysztof Korcyl; Tatiana Lyubushkina; Christian Grefe; Konstantin Toms; Alberto Valero; Antonio Policicchio; Efe Yigitbasi; Sergey Karpov; Pavol Strizenec; Leigh Schaefer; Marcel Vos; Evelin Meoni; Caterina Doglioni; Masahiro Kuze; Katherine Pachal; Davide Costanzo; Giuliano Gustavino; Mateusz Dyndal; Daniele Zanzi; Alexey Ezhilov; Miguel Arratia; David Paul Yallup; Alena Loesle; Liron Barak; Giuseppe Iacobucci; Benedetto Gorini; Harald Fox; Sergio Grancagnolo; Hok Chuen Cheng; Nico Madysa; Joshua Wyatt Smith; Alessandro Tricoli; Michele Faucci Giannelli; Jana Faltova; Stewart Patrick Swift; Mark Oreglia; Francesco De Lorenzi; Ozan Arslan; Hatice Duran Yildiz; Nicolo Vladi Biesuz; Juan Terron; Stefano Camarda; Maximilian Swiatlowski; Nikolaos Konstantinidis; Osamu Jinnouchi; Hartmut Sadrozinski; Yuya Kano; Daniel Camarero Munoz; Fangzhou Zhang; Manuella Vincter; Markus Elsing; Antony Fray; Paolo Massarotti; Lorenzo Rossini; Giulia Di Gregorio; Francois Corriveau; Karel Smolek; Petr Tas; Ana Rosario Cueto Gomez; Brian Petersen; Victor Solovyev; Bijan Haney; Sinead Farrington; Mauro Villa; Vladimir Cindro; Philip Sommer; Shunsuke Honda; M. Franklin; Yang Qin; Knut Zoch; Susumu Oda; Christian Gutschow; Masahiko Saito; Eva Hansen; Matt Zhang; Adam Bailey; Tomas Jakoubek; Matthias Danninger; Serhat Istin; Mazuza Ghneimat; Goeran Jarlskog; Alessandro De Salvo; Yury Smirnov; Alejandro Alonso; Emma Winkels; Emmanuel Le Guirriec; Andrey Ryzhov; Pier-Olivier Deviveiros; Andres Pacheco Pages; Michael Begel; Allen Mincer; Ljiljana Morvaj; Grazia Cabras; Catalin Agheorghiesei; Roland Jansky; Uwe Bratzler; Claire David; Maria Josefina Alconada Verzini; Romain Kukla; Pawel Klimek; Clara Troncon; Francesco Guescini; Juan Antonio Garcia Pascual; Chunhui Chen; Ivo van Vulpen; Elizaveta Shabalina; Guillaume Unal; Yu Zhang; Zhiqing Zhang; Karishma Sekhon; Gabriele Chiodini; Thorwald Klapdor-kleingrothaus; Frederik Ruehr; Liza Mijović; Harish Potti; Scott Snyder; Rostislav Konoplich; Sarah Heim; Giuseppe Lerner; Stefano Veneziano; Andrey Kiryunin; Laura Barranco Navarro; Leonid Serkin; Dengfeng Zhang; Sergei Smirnov; Babar Ali; Andrej Filipcic; Mario Lassnig; Liang Li; Jonathan Butterworth; Melissa Ridel; Geoffrey Mullier; Kun Liu; Christian Ohm; James Shank; Robert Astalos; Eram Rizvi; Eirik Gramstad; Steven Schramm; Yasuhiro Makida; Ana Paula Pereira Peixoto; Cristiano Alpigiani; Qi Zeng; Nabila Wahab Shaikh; Tibor Zenis; Fabio Cardillo; K. K. Gan; Steffen Henkelmann; Stefano Terzo; Ewelina Lobodzinska; Junji Tojo; Louise Heelan; Giancarlo Panizzo; Muhammad Alhroob; Hans Peter Beck; Katharine Leney; Ryan White; Paolo Camarri; Rafal Staszewski; Elena Rocco; John Rutherfoord; L. L. Ma; Giuseppe Avolio; Gianluca Alimonti; Yang Yang; Chaowaroj Wanotayaroj; Luca Colasurdo; Luc Goossens; Nadezda Proklova; Masato Aoki; Yasushi Nagasaka; Petr Andreevich Gorbounov; Simen Hellesund; Jens Weingarten; Marco Valente; Didier Ferrere; Ina Carli; Sofia Chouridou; Hideyuki Oide; Marcello Bindi; Sandro Palestini; Andrea Ventura; Anna Kaczmarska; Tomas Davidek; Monika Wielers; Yang Li; Domizia Orestano; Nico Giangiacomi; Garabed Halladjian; Alessandro La Rosa; Lawrence Lee; Yaquan Fang; Kevin Varvell; Nils-Arne Rosien; Andrew Pilkington; Claus Goessling; Trine Poulsen; Enrico Junior Schioppa; Arnaud Lucotte; Laura Gonella; Esteban Fullana Torregrosa; Katsuo Tokushuku; Ruchika Nayyar; Rosa Simoniello; Tobias Golling; Kristin Lohwasser; Iouri Naryshkin; Vasiliki Kouskoura; Weiming Yao; Simone Michele Mazza; Patrawan Pasuwan; Frank Ellinghaus; Steven Goldfarb; Valerie Susanne Lang; Arwa Bannoura; Judita Mamuzic; Pavel Staroba; Marcela Mikestikova; Tatyana Kharlamova; Emily McDonald; Jian Cong Zeng; Francisco Alonso; Chris Hays; Craig Sawyer; Pawel Bruckman de Renstrom; Carlos Lacasta; Paolo Morettini; Wolfgang Walkowiak; Kyle Cranmer; Kuan-yu Lin; Joseph Reichert; Vincenzo Canale; Saskia Falke; Krzysztof Wozniak; Claire Antel; Joern Lange; Sandro De Cecco; Silvia Biondi; Julien Donini; Bernhard Meirose; James Robinson; Calin Alexa; Sophie Trincaz-Duvoid; Giada Mancini; Carl Suster; Antonio Ereditato; Wade Cameron Fisher; Marina Rotaru; Aidan Grummer; Petr Balek; Nicolas Morange; Per Johansson; Massimo Della Pietra; Riccardo-Maria Bianchi; Alison Lister; Christos Leonidopoulos; Laura Perini; Dirk Sammel; Giuseppe Callea; Miaoran Lu; Marc-Andre Pleier; Vitaliano Chiarella; Mariusz Przybycien; Petr Hamal; Artur Trofymov; Antoine Marzin; Trisha Farooque; Alan Litke; Frank Winklmeier; Mihai Caprini; Christian Weiser; Florencia Luciana Castillo; Helmut Wolters; Iacopo Vivarelli; Jahred Adelman; Wendy Taylor; Ning Zhou; Koji Terashi; Fabio Cerutti; Paul Glaysher; Emma Torró Pastor; Thomas Trefzger; Alexey Zhemchugov; Baptiste Ravina; Rachel Maria Avramidou; Stephen Hillier; Mohammed Ezzi; Sten Hellman; Wing Sheung Chan; Phillip Urquijo; Vakhtang Kartvelishvili; Lorenzo Massa; Benedict Tobias Winter; Fabian Thiele; Oscar Estrada Pastor; Daniel Lellouch; Aliaksei Hrynevich; Spyridon Argyropoulos; Sergey Senkin; Frederic Deliot; Takuya Nobe; Farida Fassi; Sahal Yacoob; Giuseppe Francesco Tartarelli; Anton Wolf; Farid Ould-Saada; Rachik Soualah; Gilberto Giugliarelli; Wenhao Xu; Artem Maevskiy; Christoph Falk Anders; Roberto Di Nardo; Marcus De Beurs; Marilea Reale; Michal Svatos; Yulia Rodina; Dimitrii Krasnopevtsev; Pingchuan Zhao; Marino Romano; Liang Guan; Peter Loch; Giovanna Cottin; Weimin Song; Heather Gray; Martin Nagel; Stephen Burke; Alexander Held; Paul Thompson; Edward Moyse; Jyoti Prakash Biswal; Jorn Grosse-Knetter; Kohei Yorita; Arno Straessner; Elizabeth Gallas; Evgenia Cheremushkina; Evelyn Thomson; Sergio Calvente Lopez; Oxana Smirnova; Bjarne Stugu; Adam Trzupek; Yoram Rozen; Fabien Jeanneau; Sau Lan Wu; Nikita Smirnov; Ryu Sawada; Michel Lefebvre; Ondrej Penc; Alexandra Tudorache; Nicholas Stuart Dann; Tomasz Bold; Ismet Siral; Andreas Kugel; Andrew Mehta; Arnaud Duperrin; Archil Durglishvili; Craig Buttar; Soumya Mohapatra; Claude Leroy; Dominik Derendarz; Pavel Tsiareshka; Trevor Vickey; Claire Gwenlan; Sergey Peleganchuk; Kristian Gregersen; Andreas Warburton; Andrew Blue; Marco Rimoldi; Peter Johannes Falke; Vadim Bednyakov; Fernando Barreiro; Peter Watkins; Mihail Chizhov; Veronica Fabiani; Santiago González de la Hoz; Xiangyang Ju; Klaus Moenig; Sylvain Tisserant; Alessandra Camplani; Krisztian Peters; David DeMarco; Julien Caudron; Ziyu Guo; Michal Marcisovsky; Ming Chung Chu; Juerg Beringer; Edoardo Maria Farina; Hugh Williams; Patrick Czodrowski; Elias Coniavitis; Diane Cinca; Juan Antonio Aguilar Saavedra; Mykhailo Lisovyi; Aaron White; Michal Suk; Michele Livan; Tamar Djobava; Ladislav Chytka; Pierre-Antoine Delsart; Ivan Sykora; Enrico Tassi; Iwona Grabowska-Bold; Sara Alderweireldt; Luigi Longo; Helio Takai; Patricia Conde Muiño; Johannes Erdmann; Anna Lipniacka; Serkant Ali Cetin; Fabrizio Trovato; Javier Montejo Berlingen; Laurent Schoeffel; Asma Hadef; Jiri Hejbal; Alexandros Marantis; Jean-Francois Arguin; Stefan Richter; Cheuk Yee Lo; Magda Anna Chelstowska; Nicola Orlando; Roger Jones; Marc Escalier; Salvatore Bruno; Giulia Gonella; Sarah Jones; Elisabetta Pianori; Maciej Trzebinski; Nicolas Berger; Guenter Duckeck; Dominik Duda; Sebastien Prince; Alison Elliot; Zuzana Rurikova; Khilesh Pradip Mistry; Jaroslav Guenther; Robert Stanek; Diego Casadei; Minghui Liu; Yuta Okazaki; Calliope Louisa Sotiropoulou; Tomoya Iizawa; Victor Araujo Ferraz; Vladimir Tikhomirov; Umberto De Sanctis; Per Edvin Sidebo; Eftychia Tzovara; Dale Charles Abbott; Werner Spolidoro Freund; Alessandro Calandri; Remi Lafaye; James Broughton; Ralf Hertenberger; Giacomo Artoni; Christophe Raymond Goudet; Oliver Ricken; Patrick Rieck; Sandrine Laplace; Sergey Burdin; Rotem Barnea; Ewan Hill; Andre Sopczak; Emmanuel Sauvan; Dominik Krauss; Jonas Strandberg; Salah-eddine Dahbi; Antonios Leisos; Simone Monzani; Kathleen Whalen; Francesco Giuli; Roman Lysak; Paolo Giromini; Leszek Adamczyk; Jason Nielsen; Thomas Koffas; Marcella Bona; Beojan Stanislaus; Gianluca Introzzi; Natascha Savic; Wasikul Islam; Otmar Biebel; Fares Djama; Federico Sforza; Jonathan Bortfeldt; Eleni Myrto Asimakopoulou; Yun Tian; Romain Madar; Phillip Allport; Nicolas Ellis; Jan Godlewski; Jiri Kroll; Benjamin Trocmé; Stephen Watts; Will Davey; Yann Coadou; Wladyslaw Dabrowski; Cristinel Diaconu; Clement Helsens; Hongbo Zhu; Swagato Banerjee; Stephen Lloyd; Alessandra Betti; Peter van Gemmeren; Alberto Aloisio; Vincent Pascuzzi; Driss Benchekroun; Martin Aleksa; Ilija Vukotic; Evgeniy Khramov; James Monk; Michel Vetterli; Marco Vanadia; Takahiko Kondo; Bruno Lenzi; Aleandro Nisati; Gerjan Bobbink; Paul Dervan; Stefania Spagnolo; Dave Charlton; Robert Les; Marcella Capua; Jochen Jens Heinrich; Valentina Tudorache; Stephen Jiggins; Kunlin Han; Shunsuke Adachi; Amy Selvi Tee; Giulio Aielli; Susana Cabrera Urbán; Paolo Calafiura; Pavel Starovoitov; Lorenzo Feligioni; Vladimir Sulin; Meghan Frate; Camilla Di Donato; Ludovic Michel Scyboz; Bakar Chargeishvili; Eric Edward Corrigan; Kendall Reeves; Gideon Bella; Alexandre Rozanov; M. J. Shochet; Ewa Stanecka; Norman Gee; Efstathios Karentzos; Katharina Behr; Jozsef Toth; Peter Onyisi; Remi Zaidan; Tim Michael Heinz Wolf; Fang-ying Tsai; Irinel Caprini; Abraham Seiden; Martina Laura Ojeda; Gonzalo Enrique Orellana; Marcos Vinicius Silva Oliveira; Fabrizio Napolitano; Arka Santra; Jan Kretzschmar; Stefano Rosati; Janet Dietrich; Gen Kawamura; Angel Campoverde; Oleg Brandt; Antinea Guerguichon; James Walder; Torsten Paul Ake Åkesson; Namig Javadov; Milene Calvetti; Louis Guillaume Gagnon; Paul Jackson; Matteo Franchini; Maurizio De Santis; Christian Schmitt; Ren-Jie Wang; Hasko Stenzel; Sebastian Grinstein; Aidan Robson; Paolo Sabatini; Flavia De Almeida Dias; Marco Delmastro; Jeroen Schouwenberg; Song-Ming Wang; Danijela Bogavac; Mikhail Levchenko; Paul Miyagawa; Nataliia Zakharchuk; Valerio Dao; Kerstin Jon-And; Laurent Serin; Andrea Coccaro; Milos Lokajicek; Christos Vergis; Jiangyong Jia; Yusheng Wu; Mathieu Benoit; Georges Azuelos; Markus Cristinziani; Soshi Tsuno; Athanasios Manousos; Yee Chinn Yap; Jos Vermeulen; Sune Jakobsen; Philipp Mogg; Marek Palka; Carl Gwilliam; Osamu Sasaki; Roberto Iuppa; Yohei Yamaguchi; Anjishnu Bandyopadhyay; Philipp Horn; Syed Haider Abidi; Nishu Nishu; Jose Guillermo Panduro Vazquez; Ilia Ravinovich; Uladzimir Kruchonak; Alessia Murrone; Gerald Oakham; Annick Lleres; Nathalie Besson; Matthias Saimpert; Janusz Chwastowski; Marco Sessa; Takanori Kono; Jens Janssen; Antonio Onofre; Arthur Eugen Bolz; Nikolina Ilic; Jolanta Olszowska; Elisabeth Schopf; Vakhtang Tsulaia; Nicolin Govender; Martine Bosman; Danuta Kisielewska; Ilkay Turk Cakir; Victor Maleev; Michele Pinamonti; Marta Losada; Marija Vranjes Milosavljevic; Lee Sawyer; Joaquin Hoya; Caterina Marcon; Victor Kukhtin; Georges Aad; Hyungsuk Son; Michaela Queitsch-Maitland; George Redlinger; Fred Wickens; Ki Lie; Marcel Weirich; Matteo Negrini; Filipe Veloso; Sabrina Groh; Lucia Masetti; Thomas Billoud; Akshat Puri; Francesco Maria Follega; Vadim Gratchev; Tadej Novak; Nektarios Benekos; Miguel Villaplana Perez; Henri Bachacou; Alessandro Cerri; Massimo Lazzaroni; Edward Diehl; Jan-Hendrik Arling; Julie Kirk; Andrey Kamenshchikov; Rui Wang; Ruggero Turra; Andrea Knue; Steven Worm; Hajime Nanjo; Christian Oliver Sander; Eduard Simioni; Hongtao Yang; Matteo Scornajenghi; Valerio Vercesi; Lewis James Armitage; Khalil Bouaouda; Sigve Haug; Christina Potter; Fuqiang Wang; Benoit Lefebvre; Aparajita Dattagupta; Sourav Sen; Hans-Christian Schultz-Coulon; Yuji Yamazaki; Peter Berta; Murrough Landon; Fabrice Hubaut; Leonid Kurchaninov; Dimitrios Iliadis; Alexey Anisenkov; Yanjun Tu; Richard Keeler; Stanislav Nemecek; Frank Filthaut; Guennadi Borissov; Amal Vaidya; Laurent Chevalier; Veronika Magerl; Paola Giannetti; Orhan Cakir; Tomohiro Yamazaki; Javier Llorente Merino; Geoffrey Taylor; Anatoli Romaniouk; Alberto Stabile; Stamatios Gkaitatzis; Evgenii Baldin; Serhat Oerdek; Paul Mircea Gravila; Nikola Makovec; Marzieh Bahmani; Konstantinos Bachas; Konstantinos Nikolopoulos; Oliver Majersky; Elliot Reynolds; Troels Petersen; Oldrich Kepka; Maximilian Hils; Francesco Ragusa; Haifeng Li; Stephen Gibson; Aimilianos Koulouris; Teng Jian Khoo; Alexi Gongadze; Robert McPherson; Daniel Muenstermann; Jeffrey David Shahinian; Bruce Yabsley; Kilian Rosbach; Philipp Stolte; Tamara Vazquez Schroeder; Royer Edson Ticse Torres; Andrew D. Hamilton; Siqi Yang; Claudia Glasman; Tigran Mkrtchyan; Theodoros Alexopoulos; Paul Philipp Gadow; Leonor Cerda Alberich; Riccardo Vari; Debarati Roy; Tomas Dado; Dave Britton; Vojtech Pleskot; Yuri Kulchitsky; Margherita Primavera; Konstantinos Ntekas; Minyu Feng; Thorsten Wengler; Deepak Kar; Jianming Qian; Frank Merritt; Shyam Balaji; Lydia Brenner; Xin Wu; Nikiforos Nikiforou; Jiri Chudoba; Andrea Formica; Michal Dubovsky; Christos Anastopoulos; James Mueller; Francesca Ungaro; Jonathan David Bossio Sola; Elvedin Tahirovic; Torre Wenaus; Giulio Cornelio Grossi; Abhishek Sharma; Evangelos Kourlitis; Craig Wiglesworth; Antonio Salvucci; Bingxuan Liu; Pascal Pralavorio; Valerio Ippolito; Laura Fabbri; Lydia Roos; Stefania Xella; Radek Novotny; David Lynn; Elizabeth Brost; Martin White; Andrzej Olszewski; Nenad Vranjes; Lamberto Luminari; Peter Kodys; Tim Adye; John Baines; Lara Katharina Schildgen; Adriaan Koenig; Tristan Beau; Lily Asquith; Maria Smizanska; Mattias Ellert; Zoya Karpova; Othmane Rifki; Gunnar Jakel; Walter Hopkins; Werner Wiedenmann; Kazunori Hanagaki; Eric Lancon; Andrzej Smykiewicz; Christine Kourkoumelis; Jana Schaarschmidt;Publisher: American Physical Society (APS)Project: NSERC
A measurement of the associated production of a top-quark pair (tt) with a vector boson (W, Z) in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV is presented, using 36.1 fb-1 of integrated luminosity collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Events are selected in channels with two same- or opposite-sign leptons (electrons or muons), three leptons or four leptons, and each channel is further divided into multiple regions to maximize the sensitivity of the measurement. The ttZ and ttW production cross sections are simultaneously measured using a combined fit to all regions. The best-fit values of the production cross sections are σttZ=0.95±0.08stat±0.10syst pb and σttW=0.87±0.13stat±0.14syst pb in agreement with the Standard Model predictions. The measurement of the ttZ cross section is used to set constraints on effective field theory operators which modify the ttZ vertex.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 2003Open AccessAuthors:Schellenberg, D; Armstrong Schellenberg, J R M; Mushi, A; Savigny de, D; Mgalula, L; Mbuya, C; Victoria, C.G.;Schellenberg, D; Armstrong Schellenberg, J R M; Mushi, A; Savigny de, D; Mgalula, L; Mbuya, C; Victoria, C.G.;Country: Tanzania (United Republic of)
Objective was to document the prevalence, age-distribution, and risk factors for anaemia in Tanzanian children less than 5 years old,thereby assisting in the development of effective strategies for controlling anaemia. Cluster sampling was used to identify 2417 households at random from four contiguous districts in south-eastern United Republic of Tanzania in mid-1999. Data on various social and medical parameters were collected and analysed. Blood haemoglobin concentrations (Hb) were available for 1979 of the 2131 (93%) children identified and ranged from 1.7 to 18.6 g/dl. Overall, 87% (1722) of children had an Hb <11 g/dl, 39% (775) had an Hb <8 g/dl and 3% (65) had an Hb <5 g/dl. The highest prevalence of anaemia of all three levels was in children aged 6–11 months, of whom 10% (22/226) had an Hb <5 g/dl. However, the prevalence of anaemia was already high in children aged 1–5 months (85% had an Hb <11 g/dl, 42% had an Hb <8 g/dl, and 6% had an Hb <5 g/dl). Anaemia was usually asymptomatic and when symptoms arose they were nonspecific and rarely identified as a serious illness by the care provider. A recent history of treatment with antimalarials and iron was rare. Compliance with vaccinations delivered through the Expanded Programme of Immunization (EPI) was 82% and was notassociated with risk of anaemia. Anaemia is extremely common in south-eastern United Republic of Tanzania, even in very young infants. Further implementation of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness algorithm should improve the case management of anaemia. However, the asymptomatic nature of most episodes of anaemia highlights the need for preventive strategies. The EPI has good coverage of the target population and it may be an appropriate channel for delivering tools for controlling anaemia and malaria.
- Publication . Article . 2012Closed AccessAuthors:Hongju Cheng; Naixue Xiong; Athanasios V. Vasilakos; Laurence T. Yang; Guolong Chen; Xiaofang Zhuang;Hongju Cheng; Naixue Xiong; Athanasios V. Vasilakos; Laurence T. Yang; Guolong Chen; Xiaofang Zhuang;Publisher: Elsevier BV
The wireless mesh network is a new emerging broadband technology providing the last-mile Internet access for mobile users by exploiting the advantage of multiple radios and multiple channels. The throughput improvement of the network relies heavily on the utilizing the orthogonal channels. However, an improper channel assignment scheme may lead to network partition or links failure. In this paper we consider the assignment strategy with topology preservation by organizing the mesh nodes with available channels, and aim at minimizing the co-channel interference in the network. The channel assignment with the topology preservation is proved to be NP-hard and to find the optimized solution in polynomial time is impossible. We have formulated a channel assignment algorithm named as DPSO-CA which is based on the discrete particle swarm optimization and can be used to find the approximate optimized solution. We have shown that our algorithm can be easily extended to the case with uneven traffic load in the network. The impact of radio utilization during the channel assignment process is discussed too. Extensive simulation results have demonstrated that our algorithm has good performance in both dense and sparse networks compared with related works.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Preprint . 2014Open AccessAuthors:T. Aaltonen; Ronen Alon; A. Anastassov; Giorgio Apollinari; Tetsuo Arisawa; A. Artikov; J. Asaadi; A. Barbaro-Galtieri; Virgil E Barnes; B. A. Barnett; +210 moreT. Aaltonen; Ronen Alon; A. Anastassov; Giorgio Apollinari; Tetsuo Arisawa; A. Artikov; J. Asaadi; A. Barbaro-Galtieri; Virgil E Barnes; B. A. Barnett; P. Barria; Pavol Bartos; Matteo Bauce; Franco Bedeschi; Giovanni Bellettini; Douglas Benjamin; K. R. Bland; Daniela Bortoletto; L. Brigliadori; C. Bromberg; Erik Brücken; H. S. Budd; G. Busetto; P. J. Bussey; Pierfrancesco Butti; Adrian Buzatu; Aristotle Calamba; Stefano Camarda; B. Carls; Rodolfo Carosi; B. Casal; Massimo Casarsa; P. Catastini; D. Cauz; Alessandro Cerri; Lucio Cerrito; Maxwell Chertok; Giorgio Chiarelli; Keunchang Cho; D. Chokheli; Allan G Clark; M. E. Convery; D. J. Cox; Javier Cuevas; Nicola D'Ascenzo; M. Datta; A. Di Canto; B. Di Ruzza; Jay Dittmann; M. Dorigo; Ehud Duchovni; Ryan Christopher Edgar; A. Elagin; Robin Erbacher; S. Errede; Sinead Farrington; G. Flanagan; J. C. Freeman; Henry J. Frisch; Y. Funakoshi; P. Garosi; H. Gerberich; E. Gerchtein; Stefano Giagu; C. M. Ginsburg; D. Goldin; Gervasio Gomez; O. Gonzalez Lopez; A. T. Goshaw; K. Goulianos; E. Gramellini; S. R. Hahn; Kazuhiko Hara; R. F. Harr; Kenichi Hatakeyama; Chris Hays; Jochen Jens Heinrich; Matthew Herndon; A. Hocker; Ziqing Hong; S. R. Hou; R. E. Hughes; M. Hussein; Gianluca Introzzi; Andrew Ivanov; E. James; D. W. Jang; E. J. Jeon; M. Jones; S. Y. Jun; M. Kambeitz; P. E. Karchin; Azeddine Kasmi; Y. Kato; W. Ketchum; J. Keung; Benjamin Kilminster; D. H. Kim; H. S. Kim; J. E. Kim; S. H. Kim; Naoki Kimura; M. Kirby; K. Kondo; Jacobo Konigsberg; Michal Kreps; Joe Kroll; M. Kurata; M. Lancaster; Kevin Lannon; Giuseppe Latino; J. S. H. Lee; J. D. Lewis; Antonio Limosani; Elliot Lipeles; Alison Lister; Hongfang Liu; A. Loginov; J. Lueck; P. Lukens; J. Lys; Roman Lysak; R. Madrak; Paolo Maestro; Saransh Malik; Luigi Marchese; Fabrizio Margaroli; P. Marino; K. Matera; A. Mazzacane; P. Mazzanti; C. Mesropian; T. Miao; D. Mietlicki; A. Mitra; S. Moed; C. S. Moon; Roger Moore; M. J. Morello; A. Mukherjee; P. Murat; Yasuyoshi Nagai; J. Naganoma; C. Neu; T. Nigmanov; L. Nodulman; L. Oakes; I. Oksuzian; L. Ortolan; C. Pagliarone; E. Palencia; Prabhakar Palni; Manfred Paulini; Christoph Paus; Elisabetta Pianori; Justin Pilot; L. Pondrom; A. Pranko; Fedor Prokoshin; F. Ptohos; I. Redondo Fernández; P. B. Renton; M. Rescigno; Luciano Ristori; Aidan Robson; T. Rodriguez; Mauro Ronzani; Jonathan L. Rosner; V. Rusu; Koji Sato; V. Saveliev; P. Schlabach; Thomas Andrew Schwarz; Luca Scodellaro; Sally Seidel; Y. Seiya; A. Semenov; Federico Sforza; Shalhout Shalhout; Tara Shears; M. J. Shochet; I. Shreyber-Tecker; A. Simonenko; Hao Song; M. Stancari; D. Stentz; A. Sukhanov; I. Suslov; K. Takemasa; Y. Takeuchi; Jian Tang; K. Tollefson; S. Torre; D. Torretta; Fumihiko Ukegawa; G. Velev; Caterina Vernieri; R. Vilar; Marcelo Vogel; G. Volpi; Peter Wagner; R. Wallny; D. Waters; A. B. Wicklund; Scott Wilbur; H. H. Williams; J. S. Wilson; P. Wilson; Brian L Winer; T. Wright; Xin Wu; Zhenbin Wu; Koji Yamamoto; T. Yang; U. K. Yang; Yang Yang; W-M. Yao; K. Yi; Kohei Yorita; Anna Zanetti;
handle: 11384/59663 , 10261/140220
Publisher: American Physical SocietyCountries: Spain, Spain, ItalyProject: EC | TAUKITFORNEWPHYSICS (302103), NSERC , SNSF | Measurements of Higgs bos... (153664)This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and National Science Foundation; the Italian Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare; the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan; the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; the National Science Council of the Republic of China; the Swiss National Science Foundation; the A. P. Sloan Foundation; the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, Germany; the Korean World Class University Program, the National Research Foundation of Korea; the Science and Technology Facilities Council and the Royal Society, United Kingdom; the Russian Foundation for Basic Research; the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, and Programa Consolider-Ingenio 2010, Spain; the Slovak R&D Agency; the Academy of Finland; the Australian Research Council (ARC); and the EU community Marie Curie Fellowship Contract No. 302103. This work was also supported by the Shrum Foundation, the Weizman Institute of Science and the Israel Science Foundation. Results of a study of the substructure of the highest transverse momentum (pT) jets observed by the CDF Collaboration are presented. Events containing at least one jet with pT>400 GeV/c in a sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5.95 fb−1, collected in 1.96 TeV proton-antiproton collisions at the Fermilab Tevatron collider, are selected. A study of the jet mass, angularity, and planar-flow distributions is presented, and the measurements are compared with predictions of perturbative quantum chromodynamics. A search for boosted top-quark production is also described, leading to a 95% confidence level upper limit of 38 fb on the production cross section of top quarks with pT>400 GeV/c. Peer Reviewed et al.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 2018Open Access EnglishAuthors:Claudio Maffeis; Niels H Birkebaek; Maia Konstantinova; Anke Schwandt; Andriani Vazeou; Kristina Casteels; Sujata M Jali; Catarina Limbert; Auste Pundziute-Lycka; Péter Tóth-Heyn; +13 moreClaudio Maffeis; Niels H Birkebaek; Maia Konstantinova; Anke Schwandt; Andriani Vazeou; Kristina Casteels; Sujata M Jali; Catarina Limbert; Auste Pundziute-Lycka; Péter Tóth-Heyn; Carine de Beaufort; Zdenek Sumnik; Valentino Cherubini; Jannet Svensson; Danièle Pacaud; Christina Kanaka-Gantenbein; Shlomit Shalitin; Natasa Bratina; Ragnar Hanas; Guy T. Alonso; Luxmi Poran; Ana L Pereira; Marco Marigliano;
doi: 10.1111/pedi.12730
handle: 10400.17/3630
Publisher: WileyCountry: PortugalOBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of underweight (UW), overweight (OW), and obesity in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D).METHODS: An international cross-sectional study including 23 026 T1D children (2-18 years, duration of diabetes ≥1 year) participating in the SWEET prospective, multicenter diabetes registry. Body mass index SD score (BMI-SDS) was calculated using the World Health Organization BMI charts. Children were categorized as UW (BMI-SDS < -2SD), OW (+1SD < BMI-SDS ≤ +2SD), and obese (OB) (BMI-SDS > +2SD). Hierarchic regression models were applied with adjustment for sex, age, and duration of diabetes.RESULTS: The prevalence of UW, OW, and obesity was: 1.4%, 22.3%, and 7.3% in males and 0.6%, 27.2%, and 6.8% in females. Adjusted BMI-SDS was significantly higher in females than in males (mean ± SEM: 0.54 ± 0.05 vs 0.40 ± 0.05, P < 0.0001). In males, BMI-SDS significantly decreased by age (P < 0.0001) in the first three age categories 0.61 ± 0.06 (2 to <10 years), 0.47 ± 0.06 (10 to <13 years), 0.34 ± 0.05 (13 to <16 years). In females, BMI-SDS showed a U-shaped distribution by age (P < 0.0001): 0.54 ± 0.04 (2 to <10 years), 0.39 ± 0.04 (10 to <13 years), 0.55 ± 0.04 (13 to <16 years). BMI-SDS increased by diabetes duration (<2 years: 0.38 ± 0.05, 2 to <5 years: 0.44 ± 0.05, and ≥5 years: 0.50 ± 0.05, P < 0.0001). Treatment modality did not affect BMI-SDS. Adjusted HbA1c was significantly higher in females than in males (8.20% ± 0.10% vs 8.06% ± 0.10%, P < 0.0001). In both genders, the association between HbA1c and BMI-SDS was U-shaped with the highest HbA1c in the UW and obesity groups.CONCLUSIONS: The high rate of OW and obesity (31.8%) emphasize the need for developing further strategies to prevent and treat excess fat accumulation in T1D.
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You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Preprint . Other literature type . 2013Open Access EnglishAuthors:Sarah E. Medland; Jaime Derringer; Jian Yang; Tõnu Esko; Nicolas W. Martin; Konstantin Shakhbazov; Abdel Abdellaoui; Arpana Agrawal; Eva Albrecht; Behrooz Z. Alizadeh; +173 moreSarah E. Medland; Jaime Derringer; Jian Yang; Tõnu Esko; Nicolas W. Martin; Konstantin Shakhbazov; Abdel Abdellaoui; Arpana Agrawal; Eva Albrecht; Behrooz Z. Alizadeh; Najaf Amin; John Barnard; Kelly S. Benke; Lawrence F. Bielak; Jeffrey A. Boatman; Patricia A. Boyle; Gail Davies; Christiaan de Leeuw; Niina Eklund; Daniel S. Evans; Rudolf Ferhmann; Krista Fischer; Christian Gieger; Håkon K. Gjessing; Sara Hägg; Jennifer R. Harris; Caroline Hayward; Christina Holzapfel; Erik Ingelsson; Bo Jacobsson; Peter K. Joshi; Astanand Jugessur; Marika Kaakinen; Stavroula Kanoni; Juha Karjalainen; Ivana Kolcic; Kati Kristiansson; Zoltán Kutalik; Jari Lahti; Sang Hong Lee; Peng Lin; Penelope A. Lind; Yongmei Liu; Kurt Lohman; Marisa Loitfelder; George McMahon; Pedro Marques Vidal; Osorio Meirelles; Lili Milani; Marja-Liisa Nuotio; Christopher Oldmeadow; Katja Petrovic; Wouter J. Peyrot; Ozren Polasek; Lydia Quaye; Eva Reinmaa; John P. Rice; Thais S. Rizzi; Helena Schmidt; Reinhold Schmidt; Albert V. Smith; Jennifer A. Smith; Toshiko Tanaka; Antonio Terracciano; Matthijs J. H. M. van der Loos; Veronique Vitart; Henry Völzke; Jürgen Wellmann; Lei Yu; Jüri Allik; Stefania Bandinelli; François Bastardot; Jonathan P. Beauchamp; David A. Bennett; Klaus Berger; Dorret I. Boomsma; Ute Bültmann; Harry Campbell; Christopher F. Chabris; Lynn Cherkas; Francesco Cucca; Mariza de Andrade; Philip L. De Jager; Ian J. Deary; George Dedoussis; Panos Deloukas; Maria Dimitriou; Martin F. Elderson; Johan G. Eriksson; David M. Evans; Jessica D. Faul; Luigi Ferrucci; Melissa E. Garcia; Henrik Grönberg; Vilmundur Guonason; Per Hall; Juliette Harris; Tamara B. Harris; Nicholas D. Hastie; Andrew C. Heath; Dena G. Hernandez; Wolfgang Hoffmann; Adriaan Hofman; Rolf Holle; Jouke-Jan Hottenga; William G. Iacono; Thomas Illig; Mika Kähönen; Jaakko Kaprio; Robert M. Kirkpatrick; Matthew Kowgier; Antti Latvala; Lenore J. Launer; Debbie A Lawlor; Terho Lehtimäki; Jingmei Li; Paul Lichtenstein; Peter Lichtner; David C. Liewald; Patrik K. E. Magnusson; Tomi E. Mäkinen; Marco Masala; Matt McGue; Andres Metspalu; Andreas Mielck; Grant W. Montgomery; Sutapa Mukherjee; Dale R. Nyholt; Ben A. Oostra; Lyle J. Palmer; Aarno Palotie; Markus Perola; Patricia A. Peyser; Martin Preisig; Katri Räikkönen; Olli T. Raitakari; Anu Realo; Susan M. Ring; Samuli Ripatti; Fernando Rivadeneira; Igor Rudan; Veikko Salomaa; Antti-Pekka Sarin; David Schlessinger; Rodney J. Scott; Harold Snieder; Beate St Pourcain; John M. Starr; Ida Surakka; Rauli Svento; Alexander Teumer; Henning Tiemeier; Frank J. A. van Rooij; David R. Van Wagoner; Erkki Vartiainen; Peter Vollenweider; Judith M. Vonk; Gérard Waeber; David R. Weir; H.-Erich Wichmann; Elisabeth Widen; Gonneke Willemsen; James F. Wilson; Alan F. Wright; George Davey-Smith; Lude Franke; Patrick J. F. Groenen; Albert Hofman; Magnus Johannesson; Sharon L.R. Kardia; Robert F. Krueger; David Laibson; Nicholas G. Martin; Michelle N. Meyer; Danielle Posthuma; Roy Thurik; Nicholas J. Timpson; André G. Uitterlinden; Cornelia M. van Duijn; Peter M. Visscher; Daniel J. Benjamin; David Cesarini; Philipp Koellinger;
pmc: PMC3751588
pmid: 23722424
handle: 1871.1/0963b7a9-27a9-4cbb-a429-bffdbd58c1fa , 1887/101982 , 2066/117012 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A56-B , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A59-5 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A58-7 , 20.500.11820/0f76c4b9-f0ef-4512-a24c-ab2e8cb936ff , 1765/67851 , 11370/2e7ff532-5bad-44e5-b550-7d865be1c523 , 11245/1.410713 , 11541.2/131178
pmc: PMC3751588
pmid: 23722424
handle: 1871.1/0963b7a9-27a9-4cbb-a429-bffdbd58c1fa , 1887/101982 , 2066/117012 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A56-B , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A59-5 , 11858/00-001M-0000-0029-4A58-7 , 20.500.11820/0f76c4b9-f0ef-4512-a24c-ab2e8cb936ff , 1765/67851 , 11370/2e7ff532-5bad-44e5-b550-7d865be1c523 , 11245/1.410713 , 11541.2/131178
Countries: Netherlands, United States, United Kingdom, Croatia, AustraliaProject: WT , NIH | FINANCIAL STATUS--RETIREM... (2P01AG005842-04), NIH | ECONOMICS OF AGING TRAINI... (5T32AG000186-10), EC | DEVHEALTH (269874), NSF | EAGER Proposal: Workshop ... (1064089), EC | GMI (230374), NIH | NBER Center for Aging and... (5P30AG012810-15)A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of educational attainment was conducted in a discovery sample of 101,069 individuals and a replication sample of 25,490. Three independent single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are genome-wide significant (rs9320913, rs11584700, rs4851266), and all three replicate. Estimated effects sizes are small (coefficient of determination R2 ≈ 0.02%), approximately 1 month of schooling per allele. A linear polygenic score from all measured SNPs accounts for ≈2% of the variance in both educational attainment and cognitive function. Genes in the region of the loci have previously been associated with health, cognitive, and central nervous system phenotypes, and bioinformatics analyses suggest the involvement of the anterior caudate nucleus. These findings provide promising candidate SNPs for follow-up work, and our effect size estimates can anchor power analyses in social-science genetics. Economics
Substantial popularitySubstantial popularity In top 1%Substantial influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Substantial influence In top 1%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Other literature type . 2019Open AccessAuthors:Jürgen Dengler; Thomas J. Matthews; Manuel J. Steinbauer; Sebastian Wolfrum; Steffen Boch; Alessandro Chiarucci; Timo Conradi; Iwona Dembicz; Corrado Marcenò; Itziar García-Mijangos; +35 moreJürgen Dengler; Thomas J. Matthews; Manuel J. Steinbauer; Sebastian Wolfrum; Steffen Boch; Alessandro Chiarucci; Timo Conradi; Iwona Dembicz; Corrado Marcenò; Itziar García-Mijangos; Arkadiusz Nowak; David Storch; Werner Ulrich; Juan Antonio Campos; Laura Cancellieri; Marta Carboni; Giampiero Ciaschetti; Pieter De Frenne; Jiri Dolezal; Christian Dolnik; Franz Essl; Edy Fantinato; Goffredo Filibeck; John-Arvid Grytnes; Riccardo Guarino; Behlül Güler; Monika Janišová; Ewelina Klichowska; Łukasz Kozub; Anna Kuzemko; Michael Manthey; Anne Mimet; Alireza Naqinezhad; Christian Pedersen; Robert K. Peet; Vincent Pellissier; Remigiusz Pielech; Giovanna Potenza; Leonardo Rosati; Massimo Terzi; Orsolya Valkó; Denys Vynokurov; Hannah J. White; Manuela Winkler; Idoia Biurrun;
handle: 1854/LU-8649698 , 1956/22574 , 11104/0312153 , 10400.3/5794 , 11590/363767
Publisher: WileyCountries: Italy, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Italy, Germany, Spain, Poland, Norway, Switzerland ...Aim Species-area relationships (SARs) are fundamental scaling laws in ecology although their shape is still disputed. At larger areas, power laws best represent SARs. Yet, it remains unclear whether SARs follow other shapes at finer spatial grains in continuous vegetation. We asked which function describes SARs best at small grains and explored how sampling methodology or the environment influence SAR shape. Location Palaearctic grasslands and other non-forested habitats. Taxa Vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens. Methods We used the GrassPlot database, containing standardized vegetation-plot data from vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens spanning a wide range of grassland types throughout the Palaearctic and including 2,057 nested-plot series with at least seven grain sizes ranging from 1 cm(2) to 1,024 m(2). Using nonlinear regression, we assessed the appropriateness of different SAR functions (power, power quadratic, power breakpoint, logarithmic, Michaelis-Menten). Based on AICc, we tested whether the ranking of functions differed among taxonomic groups, methodological settings, biomes or vegetation types. Results The power function was the most suitable function across the studied taxonomic groups. The superiority of this function increased from lichens to bryophytes to vascular plants to all three taxonomic groups together. The sampling method was highly influential as rooted presence sampling decreased the performance of the power function. By contrast, biome and vegetation type had practically no influence on the superiority of the power law. Main conclusions We conclude that SARs of sessile organisms at smaller spatial grains are best approximated by a power function. This coincides with several other comprehensive studies of SARs at different grain sizes and for different taxa, thus supporting the general appropriateness of the power function for modelling species diversity over a wide range of grain sizes. The poor performance of the Michaelis-Menten function demonstrates that richness within plant communities generally does not approach any saturation, thus calling into question the concept of minimal area. We thank all vegetation scientists who carefully collected multi‐ scale plant diversity data from Palaearctic Grasslands available in GrassPlot. The Eurasian Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) and the International Association for Vegetation Science (IAVS) sup‐ ported the EDGG Field Workshops, which generated a core part of the GrassPlot data. The Bavarian Research Alliance (grant BayIntAn_UBT_2017_58) and the Bayreuth Center of Ecology and Environmental Research (BayCEER) funded the initial GrassPlot workshop during which the database was established and the cur‐ rent paper was initiated. A.N. acknowledges support by the Center for International Scientific Studies and Collaboration (CISSC), Iran. C.M., I.B., I.G.‐M and J.A.C. were funded by the Basque Government (IT936‐16). D.V. carried out the research supported by a grant of the State Fund For Fundamental Research Ф83/53427. G.F. carried out the research in the frame of the MIUR initiative ‘Department of excellence' (Law 232/2016). I.D. was supported by the Polish National Science Centre (grant DEC‐2013/09/N/NZ8/03234). J.Do. was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (GA 17‐19376S). M.J. was supported by grant by Slovak Academy of Sciences (VEGA 02/0095/19). W.U. ac‐ knowledges support from the Polish National Science Centre (grant 2017/27/B/NZ8/00316).
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . Conference object . 2013Open AccessAuthors:T. Joergensen; Thomas Graven-Nielsen; S. Rosager; L. Klokker; Karen Ellegaard; B. Danneskiold-Samsoee; Henning Bliddal; Marius Henriksen;T. Joergensen; Thomas Graven-Nielsen; S. Rosager; L. Klokker; Karen Ellegaard; B. Danneskiold-Samsoee; Henning Bliddal; Marius Henriksen;Publisher: Elsevier BVCountry: Denmark
s / Osteoarthritis and Cartilage 21 (2013) S63–S312 S268 bunionectomy with osteotomy and fixation under regional anesthesia. Patients with a pain intensity rating of 40mm on a 100mm Visual Analog Scale (VAS) were randomized to receive indomethacin submicron particle capsules (40mg TID or BID or 20mg TID), celecoxib (400mg loading dose; 200mg BID), or placebo. The primary endpoint was the summed pain intensity difference measured by VAS over 48 hrs (VAS SPID-48). Results: Of the 462 patients enrolled, most (83.1%) were women with a mean age of 41.2 ( 12.5) years. Indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (509.6 91.9), 40mg BID (328.0 92.9), and 20mg TID (380.5 92.9) reduced pain (VAS SPID-48; P 0.046 for all 3 groups) compared with placebo (67.8 91.4; Figure). Although there was some evidence of analgesia for celecoxib (279.4 91.9) VAS SPID-48 did not achieve statistical significance compared with placebo. Indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (30.7; P1⁄40.013) and 40mg BID (29.8; P1⁄40.014) achieved better pain control over 4 hrs after study entry (VAS SPID-4) compared to placebo (8.9). Similarly, indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (2.5; P1⁄40.003) and 40mg BID (2.1; P1⁄40.022) provided greater total pain relief over 4 hrs after study entry (TOTPAR-4) compared with placebo (1.2). Some evidence of pain control was observed as early as 30 min (VAS SPID) in the indomethacin submicron particle capsules 40mg TID (2.9) and 40mg BID (2.6) groups compared with placebo (0.2). AEs were generally similar across treatment groups and included nausea, localized post-procedural edema, dizziness, and headache. ĂConclusions: In this study, investigational lower-dose, indomethacin submicron particle capsules provided effective pain control compared with placebo in a post-surgical model of moderate to severe acute pain. Indomethacin submicron particle capsules are a potentially promising option for patients with acute pain. 520 ACUTE AND SHORT-TERM EFFECTS OF INTRA-ARTICULAR KNEE PAIN RELIEF ON PAIN SENSITIZATION IN KNEE OA: A COHORT STUDY T. Joergensen y, T. Graven-Nielsen z, S. Rosager y, L. Klokker y, K. Ellegaard y, B. Danneskiold-Samsoee y, H. Bliddal y, M. Henriksen y. y The Parker Inst., Dept. of Rheumatology, Copenhagen Univ.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product. - Publication . Article . 1998Authors:Ibrahim Assem; Nikolaos Marmaridis;Ibrahim Assem; Nikolaos Marmaridis;Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Let a finite dimensional algebra R be a split extension of an algebra A by a nilpotent bimodule Q. We give necessary and sufficient conditions for a (partial) tilting module TA to be such that T⊗A RR is a (partial) tilting module. If this is not the case, but QA is generated by the tilting module TA , then there exists a quotient [Rbar] of R such that T⊗A [Rbar][Rbar] is a tilting module.
Average popularityAverage popularity In bottom 99%Average influencePopularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.Average influence In bottom 99%Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.add Add to ORCIDPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.