Institution
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
Government•Sofia, Bulgaria•
About: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences is a government organization based out in Sofia, Bulgaria. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Coupling constant. The organization has 17989 authors who have published 36276 publications receiving 642820 citations. The organization is also known as: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences,簡稱:BAS & Balgarska Akademiya na Naukite.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a search for new resonant and non-resonant high-mass phenomena in dielectron and dimuon fi nal states was conducted using 36 : 1 fb(-1) of proton-proton collision data.
Abstract: A search is conducted for new resonant and non-resonant high-mass phenomena in dielectron and dimuon fi nal states. The search uses 36 : 1 fb(-1) of proton-proton collision data, collected at root ...
329 citations
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TL;DR: Nano-fibres containing quaternised chitosan (QCh) have been successfully prepared by electrospinning of QCh solutions mixed with poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) and are promising for wound-healing applications.
327 citations
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American Museum of Natural History1, Umeå University2, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ3, Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg4, Free University of Berlin5, University of Helsinki6, University of Toulouse7, Rothamsted Research8, University of Hasselt9, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic10, Sewanee: The University of the South11, Centre national de la recherche scientifique12, National Research Council13, University of Camerino14, University of Porto15, Flanders Marine Institute16, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences17, Lancaster University18, Spanish National Research Council19, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences20, Forest Research Institute21, Utrecht University22, University of Oulu23, University of Warsaw24, University of Copenhagen25, University of Coimbra26, University of Latvia27, University of Sassari28, University of Nova Gorica29, Finnish Environment Institute30, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research31, Norwegian Institute for Water Research32, James Hutton Institute33, Trier University of Applied Sciences34, University of Duisburg-Essen35, Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute36, Research Institute for Nature and Forest37
TL;DR: A quantitative synthesis of longterm biodiversity trends across Europe is reported, showing how, despite overall increase in biodiversity metric and stability in abundance, trends differ between regions, ecosystem types, and taxa.
Abstract: Local biodiversity trends over time are likely to be decoupled from global trends, as local processes may compensate or counteract global change. We analyze 161 long-term biological time series (15–91 years) collected across Europe, using a comprehensive dataset comprising ~6,200 marine, freshwater and terrestrial taxa. We test whether (i) local long-term biodiversity trends are consistent among biogeoregions, realms and taxonomic groups, and (ii) changes in biodiversity correlate with regional climate and local conditions. Our results reveal that local trends of abundance, richness and diversity differ among biogeoregions, realms and taxonomic groups, demonstrating that biodiversity changes at local scale are often complex and cannot be easily generalized. However, we find increases in richness and abundance with increasing temperature and naturalness as well as a clear spatial pattern in changes in community composition (i.e. temporal taxonomic turnover) in most biogeoregions of Northern and Eastern Europe.
327 citations
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TL;DR: According to this model, the rapid deacetylation of distinct lysines in especially H2A and H2B would facilitate the association of anionic protein domains of regulatory proteins to specific nucleosomes and may represent a unique regulatory mechanism in the early steps of gene activation.
326 citations
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01 Jan 2020TL;DR: This chapter introduces the basic definitions of the concepts of Interval Valued Fuzzy Sets (IVFSs), and the relation between IFSs and IVFSs will be discussed.
Abstract: In this chapter, the basic definitions of the concepts of Interval Valued Fuzzy Sets (IVFSs) and Interval Valued Intuitionistic Fuzzy Sets (IVIFSs) will be introduced. The relation between IFSs and IVFSs will be discussed.
326 citations
Authors
Showing all 18074 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Dimitri Bourilkov | 134 | 1489 | 96884 |
Eduardo De Moraes Gregores | 133 | 1454 | 92464 |
Georgi Sultanov | 132 | 1493 | 93318 |
Plamen Iaydjiev | 131 | 1285 | 87958 |
Pedro G Mercadante | 129 | 1331 | 86378 |
Jordan Damgov | 129 | 1195 | 85490 |
Roumyana Hadjiiska | 126 | 1003 | 73091 |
Mircho Rodozov | 124 | 972 | 70519 |
Cesar Augusto Bernardes | 124 | 965 | 70889 |
Viktor Matveev | 123 | 1212 | 73939 |
Ayda Beddall | 120 | 816 | 67063 |
Andrey Marinov | 119 | 893 | 57183 |
Mariana Vutova | 117 | 606 | 56698 |
Lester Packer | 112 | 751 | 63116 |
Patrick Couvreur | 111 | 678 | 56735 |