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Albert-László Barabási

Researcher at Northeastern University

Publications -  463
Citations -  217721

Albert-László Barabási is an academic researcher from Northeastern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Complex network & Network science. The author has an hindex of 152, co-authored 438 publications receiving 200119 citations. Previous affiliations of Albert-László Barabási include Budapest University of Technology and Economics & Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

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Irregularities and power law distributions in the breathing pattern in preterm and term infants.

TL;DR: It is concluded that breathing irregularities in infants can be characterized by alpha, which provides a link between clinically accessible data and the neurophysiology of the respiratory oscillator.
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Scaling identity connects human mobility and social interactions

TL;DR: By exploiting three different mobile phone datasets that capture simultaneously human movements and social interactions, a new scaling relationship is discovered, mediated by a universal flux distribution, which links the critical exponents characterizing the spatial dependencies in human mobility and social networks.
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Transcription factor modularity in a gene-centered C. elegans core neuronal protein–DNA interaction network

TL;DR: It is shown that a core neuronal C. elegans core neuronal protein-DNA interaction network is organized into two TF modules, which contain TFs that bind to a relatively small number of target genes and are more systems specific than the TF hubs that connect the modules.
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Epigenomic and transcriptomic approaches in the post-genomic era: path to novel targets for diagnosis and therapy of the ischaemic heart? Position Paper of the European Society of Cardiology Working Group on Cellular Biology of the Heart.

TL;DR: The scope of this Position Paper will be to highlight potentials and limitations of these approaches, and to provide recommendations to optimize the search for novel diagnostic or therapeutic targets for acute ischaemia/reperfusion injury and ischaemic heart failure in the post-genomic era.