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Mark Wilkinson

Researcher at Syracuse University

Publications -  1079
Citations -  48295

Mark Wilkinson is an academic researcher from Syracuse University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Branching fraction & Caecilian. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 1014 publications receiving 38539 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Wilkinson include University of Bristol & Royal Hallamshire Hospital.

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Measurement of forward tt‾, W+bb¯ and W+cc¯ production in pp collisions at s=8 TeV

Roel Aaij, +783 more
- 10 Apr 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the production of tt¯, W+bb¯¯ and W+cc¯¯ is studied in the forward region of proton-proton collisions collected at a centre-of-mass energy of 8 TeV by the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.98 ± 0.02 fb−1.
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Measurement of the Λb0 → J/ψΛ angular distribution and the Λb0 polarisation in pp collisions

Roel Aaij, +948 more
TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of the Λb0→ J/ψΛ angular distribution and the transverse production polarisation of baryons in proton-proton collisions at center-of-mass energies of 7, 8 and 13 TeV was performed using data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb−1.
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MDPbiome: microbiome engineering through prescriptive perturbations.

TL;DR: The MDPbiome system suggests the sequence of external perturbations that will engineer that microbiome to a goal state, for example, a healthier or more performant composition, and estimates intermediate microbiome states along the path, thus making it possible to avoid particularly undesirable/unhealthy states.
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Type 1 Error Rates of the Parsimony Permutation Tail Probability Test

TL;DR: Peres-Neto and Marques (2000) expressed concern at the use of one statistical test (the bootstrap) to evaluate another (parsimony PTP) and presented simulation studies that attempted to address the performance of the PTP test more directly.
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Myxozoan infections of caecilians demonstrate broad host specificity and indicate a link with human activity

TL;DR: This first known report of myxozoan infections in caecilians provides evidence of a broad geographic and host range, however, the source of these infections remains unknown and could be related to exposure in South America, the U.K. or to conditions in captivity.