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Institution

Hokkaido University

EducationSapporo, Hokkaidô, Japan
About: Hokkaido University is a education organization based out in Sapporo, Hokkaidô, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Population. The organization has 53925 authors who have published 115403 publications receiving 2651647 citations. The organization is also known as: Hokudai & Hokkaidō daigaku.
Topics: Catalysis, Population, Gene, Virus, Oxide


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evaluating various predictive models for reducing tumour localization errors when a real-time tumour-tracking system targets a moving tumour at a slow imaging rate and with large system latencies finds that using prediction improves gated treatment accuracy for systems that have latencies of 200 ms or greater, and for systems with imaging rates of 10 Hz or slower.
Abstract: Image guidance in radiotherapy and extracranial radiosurgery offers the potential for precise radiation dose delivery to a moving tumour. Recent work has demonstrated how to locate and track the position of a tumour in real-time using diagnostic x-ray imaging to find implanted radio-opaque markers. However, the delivery of a treatment plan through gating or beam tracking requires adequate consideration of treatment system latencies, including image acquisition, image processing, communication delays, control system processing, inductance within the motor, mechanical damping, etc. Furthermore, the imaging dose given over long radiosurgery procedures or multiple radiotherapy fractions may not be insignificant, which means that we must reduce the sampling rate of the imaging system. This study evaluates various predictive models for reducing tumour localization errors when a real-time tumour-tracking system targets a moving tumour at a slow imaging rate and with large system latencies. We consider 14 lung tumour cases where the peak-to-peak motion is greater than 8 mm, and compare the localization error using linear prediction, neural network prediction and Kalman filtering, against a system which uses no prediction. To evaluate prediction accuracy for use in beam tracking, we compute the root mean squared error between predicted and actual 3D motion. We found that by using prediction, root mean squared error is improved for all latencies and all imaging rates evaluated. To evaluate prediction accuracy for use in gated treatment, we present a new metric that compares a gating control signal based on predicted motion against the best possible gating control signal. We found that using prediction improves gated treatment accuracy for systems that have latencies of 200 ms or greater, and for systems that have imaging rates of 10 Hz or slower.

377 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Jan 2016-Cell
TL;DR: It is shown that suberization responds to a wide range of nutrient stresses, mediated by the stress hormones abscisic acid and ethylene, pointing to a pivotal role of the endodermal membrane in nutrient homeostasis.

377 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of these studies suggest that the complex of CRK and C3G, or GRB2/ASH and C4G, may transduce the signals from tyrosine kinases to Ras in a number of different tissues.
Abstract: CRK protein, together with GRB2/ASH and Nck proteins, belongs to the adaptor-type Src homology (SH)2-containing molecules, which transduce signals from tyrosine kinases. Here another guanine nucleotide-releasing protein (GNRP), C3G, has been identified as a CRK SH3-binding protein. The nucleotide sequence of a 4.1-kb C3G cDNA contains a 3.2-kb open reading frame encoding a 121-kDa protein, and antibodies against C3G have been shown to detect a protein of 130-140 kDa. The carboxyl terminus of C3G has a peptide sequence homologous to GNRPs for Ras, and the expression of this carboxyl terminus region suppresses the loss of CDC25 function in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The C3G protein expressed in Escherichia coli binds to CRK and GRB2/ASH proteins. Mutational analysis of C3G assigns the SH3 binding region to a 50-amino acid region containing a proline-rich sequence. The mRNAs of both the C3G and CRK proteins are expressed ubiquitously in human adult and fetal tissues. The results of these studies suggest that the complex of CRK and C3G, or GRB2/ASH and C3G, may transduce the signals from tyrosine kinases to Ras in a number of different tissues.

377 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Action spectrum analyses showed that visible light-induced oxidation of 2-propanol by aerated gold-modified titanium(IV) oxide (titania) suspensions is initiated by excitation of gold surface plasmon, and polychromatic irradiation experiments revealed that the photocatalytic reaction rate depends strongly on properties of titania.

376 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present system provides the first example of an artificial photosynthetic system, which not only mimics light-harvesting and charge separation processes in photosynthesis but also acts as an efficient light-to-current converter in molecular devices.
Abstract: Three different kinds of mixed self-assembled monolayers have been prepared to mimic photosynthetic energy and electron transfer on a gold surface. Pyrene and boron−dipyrrin were chosen as a light-harvesting model. The mixed self-assembled monolayers of pyrene (or boron−dipyrrin) and porphyrin (energy acceptor model) reveal photoinduced singlet−singlet energy transfer from the pyrene (or boron−dipyrrin) to the porphyrin on the gold surface. The boron−dipyrrin has also been combined with a reaction center model, ferrocene−porphyrin−fullerene triad, to construct integrated artificial photosynthetic assemblies on a gold electrode using mixed monolayers of the respective self-assembled unit. The mixed self-assembled monolayers on the gold electrode have established a cascade of photoinduced energy transfer and multistep electron transfer, leading to the production of photocurrent output with the highest quantum yield (50 ± 8%, based on the adsorbed photons) ever reported for photocurrent generation at monolay...

376 citations


Authors

Showing all 54156 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Shizuo Akira2611308320561
Yi Cui2201015199725
John F. Hartwig14571466472
Yoshihiro Kawaoka13988375087
David Y. Graham138104780886
Takashi Kadowaki13787389729
Kazunari Domen13090877964
Susumu Kitagawa12580969594
Toshikazu Nakamura12173251374
Toshio Hirano12040155721
Li-Jun Wan11363952128
Wenbin Lin11347456786
Xiaoming Li113193272445
Jinhua Ye11265849496
Terence Tao11160694316
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023127
2022427
20214,744
20204,805
20194,363
20184,112