Institution
Cardiff University
Education•Cardiff, United Kingdom•
About: Cardiff University is a education organization based out in Cardiff, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 34188 authors who have published 82643 publications receiving 3046531 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Cardiff & University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire.
Topics: Population, Context (language use), Catalysis, Galaxy, Poison control
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The definition and state-of-the-art development outcomes of Digital Twin are summarized, and outstanding research issues of developing Digital Twins for smart manufacturing are identified.
Abstract: This paper reviews the recent development of Digital Twin technologies in manufacturing systems and processes, to analyze the connotation, application scenarios, and research issues of Digital Twin-driven smart manufacturing in the context of Industry 4.0. To understand Digital Twin and its future potential in manufacturing, we summarized the definition and state-of-the-art development outcomes of Digital Twin. Existing technologies for developing a Digital Twin for smart manufacturing are reviewed under a Digital Twin reference model to systematize the development methodology for Digital Twin. Representative applications are reviewed with a focus on the alignment with the proposed reference model. Outstanding research issues of developing Digital Twins for smart manufacturing are identified at the end of the paper.
649 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that in many chronic inflammatory diseases, including chronic inflammatory bowel disease, peritonitis, rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, as well as colon cancer, IL‐6 trans‐signaling is critically involved in the maintenance of a disease state, by promoting transition from acute to chronic inflammation.
Abstract: Cytokine receptors, which exist in membrane-bound and soluble forms, bind their ligands with comparable affinity. Although most soluble receptors are antagonists and compete with their membrane-associated counterparts for the ligands, certain soluble receptors are agonists. In these cases, complexes of ligand and soluble receptor bind on target cells to second receptor subunits and initiate intracellular signaling. The soluble receptors of the interleukin (IL)-6 family of cytokines (sIL-6R, sIL-11R, soluble ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor) are agonists capable of transmitting signals through interaction with the universal signal-transducing receptor for all IL-6 family cytokines, gp130. In vivo, the IL-6/sIL-6R complex stimulates several types of cells, which are unresponsive to IL-6 alone, as they do not express the membrane IL-6R. We have named this process trans-signaling. The generation of soluble cytokine receptors occurs via two distinct mechanisms-limited proteolysis and translation-from differentially spliced mRNA. We have demonstrated that a soluble form of the IL-6 family signaling receptor subunit gp130, which is generated by differential splicing, is the natural inhibitor of IL-6 trans-signaling responses. We have shown that in many chronic inflammatory diseases, including chronic inflammatory bowel disease, peritonitis, rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, as well as colon cancer, IL-6 trans-signaling is critically involved in the maintenance of a disease state, by promoting transition from acute to chronic inflammation. Moreover, in all these models, the course of the disease can be disrupted by specifically interfering with IL-6 trans-signaling using the soluble gp130 protein. The pathophysiological mechanisms by which the IL-6/sIL-6R complex regulates the inflammatory state are discussed.
649 citations
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TL;DR: This paper presented an innovative attempt to represent sustainability in three dimensions which show the complex and dynamic equilibria among economic, environmental and social aspects, and the short-, long- and longer-term perspectives.
649 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a general decision rule is introduced that avoids variance amplification and succeeds in generating smooth ordering patterns, even when demand has to be forecasted, regardless of the forecasting method used.
648 citations
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TL;DR: Banding of theDLQI will aid the clinical interpretation of an individual's DLQI score and allow DLQi scores to inform clinical decisions.
647 citations
Authors
Showing all 34629 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rob Knight | 201 | 1061 | 253207 |
Stephen V. Faraone | 188 | 1427 | 140298 |
John J.V. McMurray | 178 | 1389 | 184502 |
David R. Williams | 178 | 2034 | 138789 |
John Hardy | 177 | 1178 | 171694 |
Dorret I. Boomsma | 176 | 1507 | 136353 |
Kay-Tee Khaw | 174 | 1389 | 138782 |
Anders Björklund | 165 | 769 | 84268 |
Edward T. Bullmore | 165 | 746 | 112463 |
Peter A. R. Ade | 162 | 1387 | 138051 |
Michael John Owen | 160 | 1110 | 135795 |
Gavin Davies | 159 | 2036 | 149835 |
Suvadeep Bose | 154 | 960 | 129071 |
Todd Adams | 154 | 1866 | 143110 |
John R. Hodges | 149 | 812 | 82709 |