Institution
Brunel University London
Education•London, United Kingdom•
About: Brunel University London is a education organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Large Hadron Collider & Population. The organization has 10918 authors who have published 29515 publications receiving 893330 citations. The organization is also known as: Brunel & University of Brunel.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Findings from in vitro and in vivo studies which confirm that a range of alkyl hydroxy benzoate preservatives (parabens) are weakly estrogenic are reported, suggesting that the safety in use of these chemicals should be reassessed.
698 citations
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TL;DR: A grid-based evolutionary algorithm (GrEA) to solve many-objective optimization problems and shows the effectiveness and competitiveness of the proposed GrEA in balancing convergence and diversity.
Abstract: Balancing convergence and diversity plays a key role in evolutionary multiobjective optimization (EMO). Most current EMO algorithms perform well on problems with two or three objectives, but encounter difficulties in their scalability to many-objective optimization. This paper proposes a grid-based evolutionary algorithm (GrEA) to solve many-objective optimization problems. Our aim is to exploit the potential of the grid-based approach to strengthen the selection pressure toward the optimal direction while maintaining an extensive and uniform distribution among solutions. To this end, two concepts-grid dominance and grid difference-are introduced to determine the mutual relationship of individuals in a grid environment. Three grid-based criteria, i.e., grid ranking, grid crowding distance, and grid coordinate point distance, are incorporated into the fitness of individuals to distinguish them in both the mating and environmental selection processes. Moreover, a fitness adjustment strategy is developed by adaptively punishing individuals based on the neighborhood and grid dominance relations in order to avoid partial overcrowding as well as guide the search toward different directions in the archive. Six state-of-the-art EMO algorithms are selected as the peer algorithms to validate GrEA. A series of extensive experiments is conducted on 52 instances of nine test problems taken from three test suites. The experimental results show the effectiveness and competitiveness of the proposed GrEA in balancing convergence and diversity. The solution set obtained by GrEA can achieve a better coverage of the Pareto front than that obtained by other algorithms on most of the tested problems. Additionally, a parametric study reveals interesting insights of the division parameter in a grid and also indicates useful values for problems with different characteristics.
693 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the concepts of weak and strong cross-section dependence and apply them to the estimation of panel data models with an in-time number of strong and weak common factors.
Abstract: This paper introduces the concepts of time-speci…c weak and strong cross section dependence. A double-indexed process is said to be cross sectionally weakly dependent at a given point in time, t, if its weighted average along the cross section dimension (N) converges to its expectation in quadratic mean, as N is increased without bounds for all weights that satisfy certain ‘granularity’ conditions. Relationship with the notions of weak and strong common factors is investigated and an application to the estimation of panel data models with an in…nite number of weak factors and a …nite number of strong factors is also considered. The paper concludes with a set of Monte Carlo experiments where the small sample properties of estimators based on principal components and CCE estimators are investigated and compared under various assumptions on the nature of the
692 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the implications of policy change in the UK for academic identities within a predominantly communitarian theoretical perspective and examine the impacts of changes upon the dynamic between individuals, disciplines and universities within which academic identities are formed and sustained and upon individual and collective values central to academic identity.
Abstract: The article draws on two research projects to explore the implications of policy change in the UK for academic identities within a predominantly communitarian theoretical perspective. It focuses on biological scientists and science policies. It examines the impacts of changes upon the dynamic between individuals, disciplines and universities within which academic identities are formed and sustained and upon individual and collective values central to academic identity, namely the primacy of the discipline in academic working lives and academic autonomy. Challenges to these have been strong but they have retained much of their normative power, even if the meaning of academic autonomy has changed. Communitarian theories of academic identity may need to be modified in the contemporary environment but they do not need to be abandoned.
688 citations
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Vardan Khachatryan1, Albert M. Sirunyan1, Armen Tumasyan1, Wolfgang Adam +2283 more•Institutions (141)
TL;DR: Combined fits to CMS UE proton–proton data at 7TeV and to UEProton–antiproton data from the CDF experiment at lower s, are used to study the UE models and constrain their parameters, providing thereby improved predictions for proton-proton collisions at 13.
Abstract: New sets of parameters ("tunes") for the underlying-event (UE) modeling of the PYTHIA8, PYTHIA6 and HERWIG++ Monte Carlo event generators are constructed using different parton distribution functions. Combined fits to CMS UE data at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV and to UE data from the CDF experiment at lower sqrt(s), are used to study the UE models and constrain their parameters, providing thereby improved predictions for proton-proton collisions at 13 TeV. In addition, it is investigated whether the values of the parameters obtained from fits to UE observables are consistent with the values determined from fitting observables sensitive to double-parton scattering processes. Finally, comparisons of the UE tunes to "minimum bias" (MB) events, multijet, and Drell-Yan (q q-bar to Z / gamma* to lepton-antilepton + jets) observables at 7 and 8 TeV are presented, as well as predictions of MB and UE observables at 13 TeV.
686 citations
Authors
Showing all 11074 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Yang Yang | 171 | 2644 | 153049 |
Hongfang Liu | 166 | 2356 | 156290 |
Gavin Davies | 159 | 2036 | 149835 |
Marjo-Riitta Järvelin | 156 | 923 | 100939 |
Matt J. Jarvis | 144 | 1064 | 85559 |
Alexander Belyaev | 142 | 1895 | 100796 |
Louis Lyons | 138 | 1747 | 98864 |
Silvano Tosi | 135 | 1712 | 97559 |
John A Coughlan | 135 | 1312 | 96578 |
Kenichi Hatakeyama | 134 | 1731 | 102438 |
Kristian Harder | 134 | 1613 | 96571 |
Peter R Hobson | 133 | 1590 | 94257 |
Christopher Seez | 132 | 1256 | 89943 |
Liliana Teodorescu | 132 | 1471 | 90106 |
Umesh Joshi | 131 | 1249 | 90323 |