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Xiang Zhang

Researcher at Baylor College of Medicine

Publications -  3483
Citations -  144843

Xiang Zhang is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 154, co-authored 1733 publications receiving 117576 citations. Previous affiliations of Xiang Zhang include University of California, Berkeley & University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

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Reactions of N-acylated indoles with singlet oxygen

TL;DR: In this paper, the reaction of seven N-acyl indole derivatives with singlet oxygen was investigated and the results showed that 1-acetyl-(2a) and 1-(chloroacetyl)-2-hydroperoxy-3-methyleneindoline (2b) gave high yields via ene reaction on irradiation with oxygen in the presence of TPP sensitizer.
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Adiabatic far-field sub-diffraction imaging

TL;DR: An adiabatic lens is introduced, which utilizes a geometrically conformal surface to mediate the interference of slowly decompressed electromagnetic waves at far field to form images to extend the domain of geometrical optics to a deep sub-wavelength scale.
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Preconstructing Asymmetric Interface in Air Cathodes for High‐Performance Rechargeable Zn–Air Batteries

TL;DR: This work provides an effective strategy towards advanced asymmetric air cathodes with high electrocatalytic efficiency and significantly promotes the performance of rechargeable zinc-air batteries for vast applications.
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Deletion of LCE3C and LCE3B genes is associated with psoriasis in a northern Chinese population

TL;DR: This work has shown that a deletion in the late cornified envelope (LCE) gene cluster is associated with susceptibility to psoriasis in European populations, but the relationship remains unclear in a northern Chinese population.
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A vector field model to handle the displacement of multiple conflicts in building generalization

TL;DR: This study establishes a vector field model to handle the displacement of multiple conflicts in building generalization and shows that this global method can settle multiple conflicts and preserve the spatial relations and important building patterns.