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Institution

Kōchi University

EducationKochi, Japan
About: Kōchi University is a education organization based out in Kochi, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Zircon. The organization has 5314 authors who have published 10056 publications receiving 204869 citations. The organization is also known as: Kōchi Daigaku.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the first time the occurrence of Mg-Al granulites within the khondalite belt of the North China Craton and provided robust evidence for extreme crustal metamorphism at ultrahigh-temperature (UHT) conditions in this region.

376 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mouse morulae were exposed to solutions containing 30-50% of permeable agents in modified phosphate-buffered saline (PB1 medium) at 20 degrees C for 20 min, and nearly all embryos developed in culture and 51% developed to live young at term after transfer.
Abstract: Mouse morulae were exposed to solutions containing 30-50% of permeable agents (ethylene glycol, glycerol, propylene glycol) in modified phosphate-buffered saline (PB1 medium) at 20 degrees C for 20 min. A high percentage of them developed to expanded blastocysts in culture, after exposure to 30% and 40% ethylene glycol (98 and 84%, respectively), or 30% glycerol (88%). Ethylene glycol and glycerol were diluted to 30 and 40% with PB1 medium or with PB1 containing 30% Ficoll or 30% Ficoll + 0.5 M-sucrose, immersed in liquid nitrogen in straws and warmed in 20 degrees C water. Solutions containing 40% of a permeable agent with Ficoll did not crystallize during cooling or warming. Mouse morulae were exposed to 40% ethylene glycol in PB1 medium containing 30% Ficoll (EF) or PB1 medium + 30% Ficoll + 0.5 M-sucrose (EFS) for 5-20 min at 20 degrees C. EFS solution was non-toxic to the embryos during 5 min of exposure. When embryos, equilibrated in EFS solution for 2 or 5 min at 20 degrees C, were vitrified at -196 degrees C and were warmed rapidly, nearly all embryos developed in culture (97-98%), and 51% developed to live young at term after transfer. This method, which results in virtually no decrease in embryonic viability, may be of practical use for embryo preservation.

369 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Sep 2018-Cell
TL;DR: This work presents a machine-intelligence technology based on a radically different architecture that realizes real-time image-based intelligent cell sorting at an unprecedented rate and is expected to enable machine-based scientific discovery in biological, pharmaceutical, and medical sciences.

366 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A global survey of reef fishes shows that the consequences of biodiversity loss are greater than previously anticipated as ecosystem functioning remained unsaturated with the addition of new species.
Abstract: Difficulties in scaling up theoretical and experimental results have raised controversy over the consequences of biodiversity loss for the functioning of natural ecosystems. Using a global survey of reef fish assemblages, we show that in contrast to previous theoretical and experimental studies, ecosystem functioning (as measured by standing biomass) scales in a nonsaturating manner with biodiversity (as measured by species and functional richness) in this ecosystem. Our field study also shows a significant and negative interaction between human population density and biodiversity on ecosystem functioning (i.e., for the same human density there were larger reductions in standing biomass at more diverse reefs). Human effects were found to be related to fishing, coastal development, and land use stressors, and currently affect over 75% of the world’s coral reefs. Our results indicate that the consequences of biodiversity loss in coral reefs have been considerably underestimated based on existing knowledge and that reef fish assemblages, particularly the most diverse, are greatly vulnerable to the expansion and intensity of anthropogenic stressors in coastal areas.

354 citations


Authors

Showing all 5332 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Shizuo Akira2611308320561
Christopher Gillberg13175467561
William J. McKenna13052867381
Kiyoshi Takeda129416109817
M. Santosh103134449846
Motoharu Seiki10034835345
H. Phillip Koeffler9247929428
Jonathan F. Ormes8930627022
George R. Pettit8984831759
Christos C. Zouboulis8868927614
Haibo Zhang6542216831
Alan M. Bond6492723656
Motoo Shiro6472017786
Shun-Ichi Murahashi6243914117
Eric S. Daar6223614205
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202311
202230
2021540
2020466
2019414
2018416