Institution
Dublin City University
Education•Dublin, Ireland•
About: Dublin City University is a education organization based out in Dublin, Ireland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Machine translation. The organization has 5904 authors who have published 17178 publications receiving 389376 citations. The organization is also known as: National Institute for Higher Education, Dublin & DCU.
Topics: Context (language use), Machine translation, Laser, Irish, Population
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: It is claimed that this reveals the true depth of von Neumann's achievement and influence on the subsequent development of this field, and further that it generates a whole family of new consequent problems, which can still serve to informif not actually definethe field of artificial life for many years to come.
Abstract: In the late 1940s John von Neumann began to work on what he intended as a comprehensive "theory of [complex] automata." He started to develop a book length manuscript on the subject in 1952. However, he put it aside in 1953, apparently due to pressure of other work. Due to his tragically early death in 1957, he was never to return to it. The draft manuscript was eventually edited, and combined for publication with some related lecture transcripts, by Burks in 1966. It is clear from the time and effort that von Neumann invested in it that he considered this to be a very significant and substantial piece of work. However, subsequent commentators (beginning even with Burks) have found it surprisingly difficult to articulate this substance. Indeed, it has since been suggested that von Neumann's results in this area either are trivial, or, at the very least, could have been achieved by much simpler means. It is an enigma. In this paper I review the history of this debate (briefly) and then present my own attempt at resolving the issue by focusing on an analysis of von Neumann's problem situation. I claim that this reveals the true depth of von Neumann's achievement and influence on the subsequent development of this field, and further that it generates a whole family of new consequent problems, which can still serve to inform - if not actually define - the field of artificial life for many years to come.
117 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported on the enhancement of fluorescence that can result from the proximity of fluorophores to metallic nanoparticles (NPs), which can be exploited to improve the signal obtained from optical biochips and thereby lower the limits of detection.
Abstract: This paper reports on the enhancement of fluorescence that can result from the proximity of fluorophores to metallic nanoparticles (NPs). This plasmonic enhancement, which is a result of the localized surface plasmon resonance at the metal surface, can be exploited to improve the signal obtained from optical biochips and thereby lower the limits of detection. There are two distinct enhancement effects: an increase in the excitation of the fluorophore and an increase in its quantum efficiency. This study focuses on the first of these effects where the maximum enhancement occurs when the NP plasmon resonance wavelength coincides with the fluorophore absorption band. In this case, the excitation enhancement is proportional to the square of the amplitude of the electric field. The scale of the enhancement depends on many parameters, such as NP size and shape, metal type, and NP–fluorophore separation. A model system consisting of spherical gold/silver alloy NPs, surrounded by a silica spacer shell, to which is attached a fluorescent ruthenium dye, was chosen and the dependence of the fluorescence enhancement on NP diameter was investigated. Theoretical calculations, based on Mie theory, were carried out to predict the maximum possible enhancement factor for spherical NPs with a fixed composition and a range of diameters. Spherical NPs of the same composition were fabricated by chemical preparation techniques. The NPs were coated with a thin silica shell to overcome quenching effects and the dye was attached to the shell.
117 citations
••
TL;DR: A comparative study on the use of planar patterns in the generation of control points for camera calibration is provided, indicating that well accepted methods may give poorer results than necessary if applied naively.
117 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of substrate reactivity on the growth and structure of armchair GNRs (AGNRs) grown on inert Au(111) and active Cu(111), surfaces has been systematically studied by a combination of core-level X-ray spectroscopies and scanning tunneling microscopy.
Abstract: Atomically precise graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) can be fabricated via thermally induced polymerization of halogen containing molecular precursors on metal surfaces. In this paper the effect of substrate reactivity on the growth and structure of armchair GNRs (AGNRs) grown on inert Au(111) and active Cu(111) surfaces has been systematically studied by a combination of core-level X-ray spectroscopies and scanning tunneling microscopy. It is demonstrated that the activation threshold for the dehalogenation process decreases with increasing catalytic activity of the substrate. At room temperature the 10,10′-dibromo-9,9′-bianthracene (DBBA) precursor molecules on Au(111) remain intact, while on Cu(111) a complete surface-assisted dehalogenation takes place. Dehalogenation of precursor molecules on Au(111) only starts at around 80 °C and completes at 200 °C, leading to the formation of linear polymer chains. On Cu(111) tilted polymer chains appear readily at room temperature or slightly elevated temperatures. An...
116 citations
••
TL;DR: This article examined the associations among prior academic achievement, prior knowledge of accounting, gender, motives, expectations and preparedness for higher education and academic performance in the first year of an accounting program at an Irish university.
116 citations
Authors
Showing all 6059 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph Wang | 158 | 1282 | 98799 |
David Cameron | 154 | 1586 | 126067 |
David Taylor | 131 | 2469 | 93220 |
Gordon G. Wallace | 114 | 1267 | 69095 |
David A. Morrow | 113 | 598 | 56776 |
G. Hughes | 103 | 957 | 46632 |
David Wilson | 102 | 757 | 49388 |
Muhammad Imran | 94 | 3053 | 51728 |
Haibo Zeng | 94 | 604 | 39226 |
David Lloyd | 90 | 1017 | 37691 |
Vikas Kumar | 89 | 859 | 39185 |
Luke P. Lee | 84 | 413 | 22803 |
James Chapman | 82 | 483 | 36468 |
Muhammad Iqbal | 77 | 961 | 23821 |
Michael C. Berndt | 76 | 228 | 16897 |