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Luc Martens

Researcher at Ghent University

Publications -  838
Citations -  15268

Luc Martens is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wireless network & Path loss. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 790 publications receiving 13187 citations. Previous affiliations of Luc Martens include Intec, Inc. & Information Technology University.

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Review: The physiology of saliva and transfer of drugs into saliva.

TL;DR: Saliva or oral fluid is now meeting the demand for inexpensive, non-invasive and easy-to-use diagnostic aids for oral and systemic diseases, drug monitoring and detection of illicit use of drugs of abuse, including alcohol.
Journal Article

Judgement criteria for molar incisor hypomineralisation (MIH) in epidemiologic studies: a summary of the European meeting on MIH held in Athens, 2003.

TL;DR: The aims of this meeting were to establish criteria for the judgement of MIH, to select representative cases and to discuss how the name of the condition was best described as hypomineralised, or hypomaturated, first permanent molars.
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The industrial indoor channel: large-scale and temporal fading at 900, 2400, and 5200 MHz

TL;DR: The industrial environment is categorized into different topographies and large-scale fading is well expressed by a one-slope path-loss model and excellent agreement with a lognormal distribution is obtained.
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Characterization of On-Body Communication Channel and Energy Efficient Topology Design for Wireless Body Area Networks

TL;DR: The propagation channel between two half-wavelength dipoles at 2.45 GHz, placed near a human body is discussed and an application for cross-layer design is presented in order to optimize the energy consumption of different topologies.
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Dental agenesis: genetic and clinical perspectives

TL;DR: The objective was to review the current literature on the molecular mechanisms that are responsible for selective dental agenesis in humans and to present a detailed overview of syndromes with hypodontia and their causative genes.