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Ping Li

Researcher at Sun Yat-sen University

Publications -  1634
Citations -  29128

Ping Li is an academic researcher from Sun Yat-sen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 1085 publications receiving 21357 citations. Previous affiliations of Ping Li include The Chinese University of Hong Kong & National Science Foundation.

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Characterizing distribution of steroidal alkaloids in Fritillaria spp. and related compound formulas by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry combined with hierarchial cluster analysis.

TL;DR: The results demonstrated that the qualitative and quantitative differences in steroidal alkaloids were useful not only for chemotaxonomy in some medicinal Fritillaria species but also for species identification in compound formulas.
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Second language acquisition of Mandarin Chinese vocabulary: context of learning effects

TL;DR: The learning trajectory of the participants in the VE showed a larger acceleration than that of those in the traditional learning context, which suggests that simulated embodied experience in theVE may have aided in the processing of a second language, especially with regard to enhancing the learning trajectory in short-term second language training.
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Pharmacokinetic comparison between quercetin and quercetin 3-O-β-glucuronide in rats by UHPLC-MS/MS.

TL;DR: Q3G is a major active component in plasma and tissue for oral administration of quercetin or Q3G in rats, and an UHPLC-MS/MS method to compare the pharmacokinetic profiles was developed.
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High-speed separation and characterization of major constituents in Radix Paeoniae Rubra by fast high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with diode-array detection and time-of-flight mass spectrometry

TL;DR: The established fast HPLC/DAD/TOFMS method coupled with diode-array detection and electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry turns out to be a highly useful technique to identify constituents in complex herbal medicines.

The Acquisition of Word Meaning through Global Lexical Co-occurrences

TL;DR: This article studied the role of distributional information in the lexical representation of words in the process of word meaning acquisition, and proposed two major hypotheses on how children acquire word meaning: the semantic bootstrapping hypothesis (Grimshaw, 1981; Pinker, 1984, 1987) and the syntactic bootstrap-based hypothesis (Landau & Gleitman, 1990).