S
Stefan Wagner
Researcher at University of Stuttgart
Publications - 771
Citations - 16023
Stefan Wagner is an academic researcher from University of Stuttgart. The author has contributed to research in topics: Software quality & Genetic programming. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 715 publications receiving 13848 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefan Wagner include Technische Universität München & Bosch.
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Reference BookDOI
Genetic Algorithms and Genetic Programming: Modern Concepts and Practical Applications
TL;DR: This book provides a better understanding of the basic workflow of GAs and GP, encouraging readers to establish new bionic, problem-independent theoretical concepts and shows how to substantially increase achievable solution quality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II regulates cardiac Na+ channels
Stefan Wagner,Nataliya Dybkova,Eva C.L. Rasenack,Claudius Jacobshagen,Larissa Fabritz,Paulus Kirchhof,Sebastian Maier,Tong Zhang,Gerd Hasenfuss,Joan Heller Brown,Donald M. Bers,Lars S. Maier +11 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that CaMKII associates with and phosphorylates cardiac Na(+) channels and alters I( Na) gating to reduce availability at high heart rate, while enhancing late I(Na) (which could prolong action potential duration) in mice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Generation of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells from Human Cord Blood
Alexandra Haase,Ruth Olmer,Kristin Schwanke,Stephanie Wunderlich,Sylvia Merkert,Christian Hess,Robert Zweigerdt,Ina Gruh,Johann Meyer,Stefan Wagner,Lars S. Maier,Dong Wook Han,Silke Glage,Konstantin Miller,Philipp Fischer,Hans R. Schöler,Ulrich Martin +16 more
TL;DR: The generation of human iPSCs from cord blood (CB) as a juvenescent cell source is reported, showing characteristics typical of embryonic stem cells and can be differentiated into derivatives of all three germ layers, including functional cardiomyocytes.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Do code clones matter
TL;DR: For the analyzed commercial and open source systems, it was found that inconsistent changes to clones are very frequent but also identified a significant number of faults induced by such changes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Blocking Late Sodium Current Reduces Hydrogen Peroxide-Induced Arrhythmogenic Activity and Contractile Dysfunction
TL;DR: The hypothesis that an increase inLate INa during exposure of ventricular myocytes to H2O2 contributes to electrical and contractile dysfunction is confirmed and inhibition of late INa may offer protection against ROS-induced Na+ and Ca2+ overload is suggested.