Institution
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Education•Jeddah, Saudi Arabia•
About: King Abdullah University of Science and Technology is a education organization based out in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Membrane. The organization has 6221 authors who have published 22019 publications receiving 625706 citations. The organization is also known as: KAUST.
Topics: Catalysis, Membrane, Computer science, Fading, Population
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Overall the data suggest strong spatial gradients in mesopelagic DVM patterns, with implied ecological and biogeochemical consequences, which can be explained by horizontal patterns in physical-chemical properties of water masses, such as oxygen, temperature and turbidity.
Abstract: Recent studies suggest that previous estimates of mesopelagic biomasses are severely biased, with the new, higher estimates underlining the need to unveil behaviourally mediated coupling between shallow and deep ocean habitats. We analysed vertical distribution and diel vertical migration (DVM) of mesopelagic acoustic scattering layers (SLs) recorded at 38 kHz across oceanographic regimes encountered during the circumglobal Malaspina expedition. Mesopelagic SLs were observed in all areas covered, but vertical distributions and DVM patterns varied markedly. The distribution of mesopelagic backscatter was deepest in the southern Indian Ocean (weighted mean daytime depth: WMD 590 m) and shallowest at the oxygen minimum zone in the eastern Pacific (WMD 350 m). DVM was evident in all areas covered, on average ~50% of mesopelagic backscatter made daily excursions from mesopelagic depths to shallow waters. There were marked differences in migrating proportions between the regions, ranging from ~20% in the Indian Ocean to ~90% in the Eastern Pacific. Overall the data suggest strong spatial gradients in mesopelagic DVM patterns, with implied ecological and biogeochemical consequences. Our results suggest that parts of this spatial variability can be explained by horizontal patterns in physical-chemical properties of water masses, such as oxygen, temperature and turbidity.
155 citations
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TL;DR: The present version of LncBook is dedicated to the integration and curation of human lncRNAs as well as their associated data and thus bears great promise to serve as a valuable knowledgebase for worldwide research communities.
Abstract: Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have significant functions in a wide range of important biological processes. Although the number of known human lncRNAs has dramatically increased, they are poorly annotated, posing great challenges for better understanding their functional significance and elucidating their complex functioning molecular mechanisms. Here, we present LncBook (http://bigd.big.ac.cn/lncbook), a curated knowledgebase of human lncRNAs that features a comprehensive collection of human lncRNAs and systematic curation of lncRNAs by multi-omics data integration, functional annotation and disease association. In the present version, LncBook houses a large number of 270 044 lncRNAs and includes 1867 featured lncRNAs with 3762 lncRNA-function associations. It also integrates an abundance of multi-omics data from expression, methylation, genome variation and lncRNA-miRNA interaction. Also, LncBook incorporates 3772 experimentally validated lncRNA-disease associations and further identifies a total of 97 998 lncRNAs that are putatively disease-associated. Collectively, LncBook is dedicated to the integration and curation of human lncRNAs as well as their associated data and thus bears great promise to serve as a valuable knowledgebase for worldwide research communities.
155 citations
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TL;DR: Analysis of taxonomic inferences of benthic macroinvertebrate samples of known taxonomic composition obtained using alternative metabarcoding protocols prove metabarcode valid for environmental status assessment and will contribute to accelerating the implementation of this technique to regular monitoring programs.
Abstract: Characterization of biodiversity has been extensively used to confidently monitor and assess environmental status. Yet, visual morphology, traditionally and widely used for species identification in coastal and marine ecosystem communities, is tedious and entails limitations. Metabarcoding coupled with high-throughput sequencing represents an alternative to rapidly, accurately and cost-effectively analyze thousands of environmental samples simultaneously, and this method is increasingly used to characterize the metazoan taxonomic composition of a wide variety of environments. However, a comprehensive study benchmarking visual and metabarcoding-based taxonomic inferences that validates this technique for environmental monitoring is still lacking. Here we compare taxonomic inferences of benthic macroinvertebrate samples of known taxonomic composition obtained using alternative metabarcoding protocols based on a combination of different DNA sources, barcodes of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene and amplification conditions. Our results highlight the influence of the metabarcoding protocol in the obtained taxonomic composition and suggest the better performance of an alternative 313 bp length barcode to the traditionally 658 bp length one used for metazoan metabarcoding. Additionally, we show that a biotic index inferred from the list of macroinvertebrate taxa obtained using DNA-based taxonomic assignments is comparable to that inferred using morphological identification. Thus, our analyses prove metabarcoding valid for environmental status assessment and will contribute to accelerating the implementation of this technique to regular monitoring programs.
155 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented work was supported by Saudi Aramco under the FUELCOM program and by the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) with competitive research funding given to the Clean Combustion Research Center (CCRC).
154 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors have reported their pioneered research on aspects of MED and related hybrid MEDAD cycles, both at theoretical models and experimental pilots, and examined the cost apportionment of fuel cost by the quality or exergy of working steam for such cogeneration configurations.
154 citations
Authors
Showing all 6430 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Jian-Kang Zhu | 161 | 550 | 105551 |
Jean M. J. Fréchet | 154 | 726 | 90295 |
Kevin Murphy | 146 | 728 | 120475 |
Jean-Luc Brédas | 134 | 1026 | 85803 |
Carlos M. Duarte | 132 | 1173 | 86672 |
Kazunari Domen | 130 | 908 | 77964 |
Jian Zhou | 128 | 3007 | 91402 |
Tai-Shung Chung | 119 | 879 | 54067 |
Donal D. C. Bradley | 115 | 652 | 65837 |
Lain-Jong Li | 113 | 627 | 58035 |
Hong Wang | 110 | 1633 | 51811 |
Peng Wang | 108 | 1672 | 54529 |
Juan Bisquert | 107 | 450 | 46267 |
Jian Zhang | 107 | 3064 | 69715 |
Karl Leo | 104 | 832 | 42575 |