scispace - formally typeset
F

Fan Yang

Researcher at China University of Petroleum

Publications -  1888
Citations -  34524

Fan Yang is an academic researcher from China University of Petroleum. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 986 publications receiving 23818 citations. Previous affiliations of Fan Yang include G. D. Searle & Company & Peking University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The molecular structure of green fluorescent protein

TL;DR: The crystal structure of recombinant wild-type green fluorescent protein (GFP) has been solved to a resolution of 1.9 Å by multiwavelength anomalous dispersion phasing methods and the identification of the dimer contacts may allow mutagenic control of the state of assembly of the protein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary and biomedical insights from the rhesus macaque genome

Richard A. Gibbs, +177 more
- 13 Apr 2007 - 
TL;DR: The genome sequence of an Indian-origin Macaca mulatta female is determined and compared with chimpanzees and humans to reveal the structure of ancestral primate genomes and to identify evidence for positive selection and lineage-specific expansions and contractions of gene families.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Exploit All the Layers: Fast and Accurate CNN Object Detector with Scale Dependent Pooling and Cascaded Rejection Classifiers

TL;DR: In this paper, two new strategies to detect objects accurately and efficiently using deep convolutional neural network are investigated: scale-dependent pooling and layerwise cascaded rejection classifiers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of iodine intake on thyroid diseases in China.

TL;DR: More than adequate or excessive iodine intake may lead to hypothyroidism and autoimmune thyroiditis in cohorts from three regions with different levels of iodine intake.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer statistics in China and United States, 2022: profiles, trends, and determinants

TL;DR: The decreasing cancer burden in liver, stomach, and esophagus, and increasing burden in lung, colorectum, breast, and prostate, mean that cancer profiles in China and the USA are converging.