Institution
Delft University of Technology
Education•Delft, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands•
About: Delft University of Technology is a education organization based out in Delft, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Computer science & Catalysis. The organization has 37681 authors who have published 94404 publications receiving 2741710 citations. The organization is also known as: TU-Delft & Technische Hogeschool Delft.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the median of the squared residuals is used to resist the effect of nearly 50% of contamination in the data in the special case of simple least square regression, which corresponds to finding the narrowest strip covering half of the observations.
Abstract: Classical least squares regression consists of minimizing the sum of the squared residuals. Many authors have produced more robust versions of this estimator by replacing the square by something else, such as the absolute value. In this article a different approach is introduced in which the sum is replaced by the median of the squared residuals. The resulting estimator can resist the effect of nearly 50% of contamination in the data. In the special case of simple regression, it corresponds to finding the narrowest strip covering half of the observations. Generalizations are possible to multivariate location, orthogonal regression, and hypothesis testing in linear models.
3,713 citations
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TL;DR: The evolution in design research from a user-centred approach to co-designing is changing the roles of the designer, the researcher and the person formerly known as the "user" as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Designers have been moving increasingly closer to the future users of what they design and the next new thing in the changing landscape of design research has become co-designing with your users. But co-designing is actually not new at all, having taken distinctly different paths in the US and in Europe. The evolution in design research from a user-centred approach to co-designing is changing the roles of the designer, the researcher and the person formerly known as the ‘user’. The implications of this shift for the education of designers and researchers are enormous. The evolution in design research from a user-centred approach to co-designing is changing the landscape of design practice as well, creating new domains of collective creativity. It is hoped that this evolution will support a transformation toward more sustainable ways of living in the future.
3,692 citations
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TL;DR: This article conducted an extensive literature review, employing bibliometric analysis and snowballing techniques to investigate the state of the art in the field and synthesise the similarities, differences and relationships between both terms.
3,508 citations
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TL;DR: Electrical measurements on indium antimonide nanowires contacted with one normal (gold) and one superconducting (niobium titanium nitride) electrode support the hypothesis of Majorana fermions in Nanowires coupled to superconductors.
Abstract: Majorana fermions are particles identical to their own antiparticles. They have been theoretically predicted to exist in topological superconductors. Here, we report electrical measurements on indium antimonide nanowires contacted with one normal (gold) and one superconducting (niobium titanium nitride) electrode. Gate voltages vary electron density and define a tunnel barrier between normal and superconducting contacts. In the presence of magnetic fields on the order of 100 millitesla, we observe bound, midgap states at zero bias voltage. These bound states remain fixed to zero bias, even when magnetic fields and gate voltages are changed over considerable ranges. Our observations support the hypothesis of Majorana fermions in nanowires coupled to superconductors.
3,273 citations
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TL;DR: A coherent and comprehensive review of the vast research activity concerning epidemic processes is presented, detailing the successful theoretical approaches as well as making their limits and assumptions clear.
Abstract: Complex networks arise in a wide range of biological and sociotechnical systems. Epidemic spreading is central to our understanding of dynamical processes in complex networks, and is of interest to physicists, mathematicians, epidemiologists, and computer and social scientists. This review presents the main results and paradigmatic models in infectious disease modeling and generalized social contagion processes.
3,173 citations
Authors
Showing all 38152 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Albert Hofman | 267 | 2530 | 321405 |
Charles M. Lieber | 165 | 521 | 132811 |
Ad Bax | 138 | 486 | 97112 |
George C. Schatz | 137 | 1155 | 94910 |
Georgios B. Giannakis | 137 | 1321 | 73517 |
Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté | 134 | 726 | 61947 |
Avelino Corma | 134 | 1049 | 89095 |
Mark A. Ratner | 127 | 968 | 68132 |
Jing Kong | 126 | 553 | 72354 |
Robert J. Cava | 125 | 1042 | 71819 |
Reza Malekzadeh | 118 | 900 | 139272 |
Jinde Cao | 117 | 1430 | 57881 |
Mike S. M. Jetten | 117 | 488 | 52356 |
Liquan Chen | 111 | 689 | 44229 |
Oscar H. Franco | 111 | 822 | 66649 |