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Institution

Concordia University

EducationMontreal, Quebec, Canada
About: Concordia University is a education organization based out in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Control theory. The organization has 13565 authors who have published 31084 publications receiving 783525 citations. The organization is also known as: Sir George Williams University & Loyola College, Montreal.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
K. Stephan1, S. Lin2, M. Durst1, F. Huang, D. Seher1 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the process of energy separation in a vortex tube with air as a working medium and showed that the Gortler vortex produced by the tangential velocity on the inside wall of the vortex tube is a major driving force for the energy separation.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results are consistent with the hypothesis that scramble competition for mates favours small males in this species and provides empirical support for the Ghiselin—Reiss small-male hypothesis.
Abstract: We present an empirical test of the ‘Ghiselin—Reiss small-male hypothesis’ for the evolution of sexual size dimorphism (SSD). In mating systems dominated by scramble competition, where male reproductive success is a function of encounter rate with females, small males may be favoured when food is limiting because they require lower absolute amounts of food. Given a trade-off between time and energy devoted to foraging and to mate acquisition, small males should be able to devote more time to the latter. If at the same time larger females are favoured, this mechanism will contribute to the evolution of SSD and may be the major determinant of the female-biased SSDs that characterize most animal taxa. We tested this hypothesis using the water strider,Aquarius remigis (Heteroptera: Gerridae), a scramble competitor which mates many times over a prolonged mating season and which shows female-biased SSD. Laboratory experiments demonstrated that foraging success and giving up times (GUTs) are lower for males than for females during the reproductive season and that male water striders flexibly alter their time budgets under conditions of energy limitation. Controlled feeding experiments showed that male and female longevity, female fecundity and male mating success are positively related to food availability. As predicted, male body size is negatively correlated with several indices of male fitness (longevity, number of mating attempts and mating success), while female body size is positively correlated with longevity. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that scramble competition for mates favours small males in this species and provides empirical support for the Ghiselin—Reiss small-male hypothesis.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Forced Commutated Cycloconverters (FCCs) as mentioned in this paper are converter structures capable of providing simultaneous voltage and frequency transformation without the need of intermediate stage reactive components.
Abstract: Forced Commutated Cycloconverters (FCC's) are converter structures capable of providing simultaneous voltage and frequency transformation without the need of intermediate stage reactive components. Consequently, they are well-suited for high-power density variable-frequency applications.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The BNST-OV contains circadian clock cells that normally oscillate in synchrony with theSCN, but these cells appear to require both input from the SCN and circulating glucocorticoids to maintain their circadian oscillation.
Abstract: Circadian rhythms in mammals are regulated not only globally by the master clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), but also locally by widely distributed populations of clock cells in the brain and periphery that control tissue-specific rhythmic outputs. Here we show that the oval nucleus of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST-OV) exhibits a robust circadian rhythm in expression of the Period2 (PER2) clock protein. PER2 expression is rhythmic in the BNST-OV in rats housed under a light/dark cycle or in constant darkness, in blind rats, and in mice, and is in perfect synchrony with the PER2 rhythm of the SCN. Constant light or bilateral SCN lesions abolish the rhythm of PER2 in the BNST-OV. Large abrupt shifts in the light schedule transiently uncouple the BNST-OV rhythm from that of the SCN. Re-entrainment of the PER2 rhythm is faster in the SCN than in the BNST-OV, and it is faster after a delay than an advance shift. Bilateral adrenalectomy blunts the PER2 rhythm in the BNST-OV. Thus, the BNST-OV contains circadian clock cells that normally oscillate in synchrony with the SCN, but these cells appear to require both input from the SCN and circulating glucocorticoids to maintain their circadian oscillation. Taken together with what is known about the functional organization of the connections of the BNST-OV with systems of the brain involved in stress and motivational processes, these findings place BNST-OV oscillators in a position to influence specific physiological and behavioral rhythms downstream from the SCN clock.

169 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, a generalization of the classical tableau representation of conjunctive queries is proposed for computing query answers in information integration systems where information sources are modeled as views defined on a virtual global schema.
Abstract: The foundational homomorphism techniques introduced by Chandra and Merlin for testing containment of conjunctive queries have recently attracted renewed interest due to their central role in information integration applications. We show that generalizations of the classical tableau representation of conjunctive queries are useful for computing query answers in information integration systems where information sources are modeled as views defined on a virtual global schema. We consider a general situation where sources may or may not be known to be correct and complete. We characterize the set of answers to a global query and give algorithms to compute a finite representation of this possibly infinite set, as well as its certain and possible approximations. We show how to rewrite a global query in terms of the sources in two special cases, and show that one of these is equivalent to the Information Manifold rewriting of Levy et al.

169 citations


Authors

Showing all 13754 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alan C. Evans183866134642
Michael J. Meaney13660481128
Chao Zhang127311984711
Charles Spence11194951159
Angappa Gunasekaran10158640633
Kaushik Roy97140242661
Muthiah Manoharan9649744464
Stephen J. Simpson9549030226
Roy A. Wise9525239509
Dario Farina9483232786
Yavin Shaham9423929596
Elazer R. Edelman8959329980
Fikret Berkes8827149585
Ke Wu87124233226
Nick Serpone8547430532
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202375
2022343
20211,859
20201,861
20191,734
20181,680