Institution
Bowling Green State University
Education•Bowling Green, Ohio, United States•
About: Bowling Green State University is a education organization based out in Bowling Green, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 8315 authors who have published 16042 publications receiving 482564 citations. The organization is also known as: BGSU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Thomas D. Bruns1, Meredith Blackwell2, Ivan P. Edwards3, Andy F. S. Taylor4 +252 more•Institutions (144)
TL;DR: GenBank, the public repository for nucleotide and protein sequences, is a critical resource for molecular biology, evolutionary biology, and ecology as discussed by the authors, and some attention has been drawn to sequence errors ([1][1]), common annotation errors also reduce the value of this database.
Abstract: GenBank, the public repository for nucleotide and protein sequences, is a critical resource for molecular biology, evolutionary biology, and ecology. While some attention has been drawn to sequence errors ([1][1]), common annotation errors also reduce the value of this database. In fact, for
210 citations
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TL;DR: Steady-state fluorescence measurements demonstrate that the emission of the dye can be modulated by external light and an intramolecular energy transfer mechanism accounts for the fluorescence quenching in the UV light produced isomers.
Abstract: Photochromic dithienylethene moieties were covalently attached to fluorescent 4,4-difluoro-8-(4‘-iodophenyl)-1,3,5,7-tetramethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (iodo-BODIPY) via a phenylacetylene linker. UV light induced isomerization of the photochrome results in significant decrease in fluorescence intensity. This fluorescence can be recovered with visible light. Steady-state fluorescence measurements demonstrate that the emission of the dye can be modulated by external light. An intramolecular energy transfer mechanism accounts for the fluorescence quenching in the UV light produced isomers.
210 citations
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University of New Mexico1, Washington University in St. Louis2, University of Aberdeen3, George Washington University4, University of the District of Columbia5, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation6, Silver Spring Networks7, Medical University of South Carolina8, Brunel University London9, Centre national de la recherche scientifique10, Oregon State University11, University of Wisconsin-Madison12, Carleton University13, Iowa State University14, Harvard University15, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre16, University of Utah17, New Mexico State University18, Aberystwyth University19, European Bioinformatics Institute20, IFREMER21, University of the Sunshine Coast22, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research23, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre24, University of Notre Dame25, University of Copenhagen Faculty of Science26, National Institutes of Health27, Bowling Green State University28, University of Alberta29, Lawrence University30, University of Göttingen31, Pennsylvania State University32, VU University Amsterdam33, Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience34, Kingston University35, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute36, Kenya Medical Research Institute37, University of Pennsylvania38, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory39, University of California, Santa Cruz40, American Museum of Natural History41, University of Westminster42, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory43, London Centre for Nanotechnology44
TL;DR: Parts of phero-perception, stress responses, immune function and regulation of gene expression that support the persistence of B. glabrata are described and several potential targets for developing novel control measures aimed at reducing snail-mediated transmission of schistosomiasis are identified.
Abstract: Biomphalaria snails are instrumental in transmission of the human blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni With the World Health Organization's goal to eliminate schistosomiasis as a global health problem by 2025, there is now renewed emphasis on snail control Here, we characterize the genome of Biomphalaria glabrata, a lophotrochozoan protostome, and provide timely and important information on snail biology We describe aspects of phero-perception, stress responses, immune function and regulation of gene expression that support the persistence of B glabrata in the field and may define this species as a suitable snail host for S mansoni We identify several potential targets for developing novel control measures aimed at reducing snail-mediated transmission of schistosomiasis
209 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the Corporate Communicative Response Model (CRCM) to demonstrate the effect that corporate executives' communicative responses have on third parties' perception of corporate image.
Abstract: When corporations are accused of unethical behaviour by external actors, executives from those organizations are usually compelled to offer communicative responses to defend their corporate image. To demonstrate the effect that corporate executives' communicative responses have on third parties' perception of corporate image, we present the Corporate Communicative Response Model in this paper. Of the five potential communicative responses contained in this model (no response, denial, excuse, justification, and concession), results from our empirical test demonstrate that a concession is the most effective and robust communicative option.
209 citations
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TL;DR: The hypothesis that short (<0.5 s), high-frequency ultrasonic vocalizations ("50-kHz USVs") mark a positive affective state in rats and introduce a novel and rapid marker of pharmacological reward is supported.
209 citations
Authors
Showing all 8365 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Eduardo Salas | 129 | 711 | 62259 |
Russell A. Barkley | 119 | 355 | 60109 |
Hong Liu | 100 | 1905 | 57561 |
Jaak Panksepp | 99 | 446 | 40748 |
Kenneth I. Pargament | 96 | 372 | 41752 |
Robert C. Green | 91 | 526 | 40414 |
Robert W. Motl | 85 | 712 | 27961 |
Evert Jan Baerends | 85 | 318 | 52440 |
Hugh Garavan | 84 | 419 | 28773 |
Janet Shibley Hyde | 83 | 227 | 38440 |
Michael L. Gross | 82 | 701 | 27140 |
Jerry Silver | 78 | 201 | 25837 |
Michael E. Robinson | 74 | 366 | 19990 |
Abraham Clearfield | 74 | 513 | 19006 |
Kirk S. Schanze | 73 | 512 | 19118 |