Institution
Korea University
Education•Seoul, South Korea•
About: Korea University is a education organization based out in Seoul, South Korea. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Thin film. The organization has 39756 authors who have published 82424 publications receiving 1860927 citations. The organization is also known as: Bosung College & Bosung Professional College.
Topics: Population, Thin film, Catalysis, Large Hadron Collider, Cancer
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: It can be concluded that biochar technology represents a new, cost effective, and environmentally-friendly solution for the treatment of wastewater.
409 citations
••
TL;DR: The role of the DA system in drug addiction and food motivation is focused on, with an overview of the role of D1 and D2 receptors in the control of reward-associated behaviors.
Abstract: Dopamine (DA) regulates emotional and motivational behavior through the mesolimbic dopaminergic pathway. Changes in DAmesolimbic neurotransmission have been found to modify behavioral responses to various environmental stimuli associated with reward behaviors. Psychostimulants, drugs of abuse, and natural rewards such as food can cause substantial synaptic modifications to the mesolimbic DA system. Recent studies using optogenetics and DREADDs, together with neuron-specific or circuit-specific genetic manipulations have improved our understanding of DA signaling in the reward circuit, and provided a means to identify the neural substrates of complex behaviors such as drug addiction and eating disorders. This review focuses on the role of the DA system in drug addiction and food motivation, with an overview of the role of D1 and D2 receptors in the control of reward-associated behaviors.
408 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the thermal conductivities of nanofluid containing a small amount of ultra-dispersed diamond (UDD), silver, and silica nanoparticles were measured using a transient hot-wire method.
Abstract: The thermal conductivities of nanofluid containing a small amount of ultra-dispersed diamond (UDD), silver, and silica nanoparticles were measured using a transient hot-wire method. To explain the enhancement of thermal conductivity of nanofluid, the effective volume of nanoparticles was used instead of the real volume to predict the thermal conductivity of nanofluid. The liquid layering on the surface of nanoparticles may be described as the effective volume of nanoparticles. This liquid layering is one important mechanism of the heat transfer in nanofluids. The effective volume of nanoparticles was estimated from high shear viscosity of nanofluid using the Einstein equation. The Hamilton–Crosser model with an effective volume fraction of nanoparticles resulted in better correlation for the thermal conductivities of nanofluids.
406 citations
•
TL;DR: In this paper, the critical values of the extended Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests of First and Second Order Stochastic Dominance in the general K-prospect case are estimated.
Abstract: We propose a procedure for estimating the critical values of the extended Kolmogorov- Smirnov tests of First and Second Order Stochastic Dominance in the general K-prospect case. We allow for the observations to be serially dependent and, for the first time, we can accommodate general dependence amongst the prospects which are to be ranked. Also, the prospects may be the residuals from certain conditional models, opening the way for conditional ranking. We also propose a test of Prospect Stochastic Dominance. Our method is subsampling; we show that the resulting tests are consistent and powerful against some N|1/2 local alternatives even when computed with a data-based subsample size. We also propose some heuristic methods for selecting subsample size and demonstrate in simulations that they perform reasonably. We show that our test is asymptotically similar on the entire boundary of the null hypothesis, and is unbiased. In comparison, any method based on resampling or simulating from the least favorable distribution does not have these properties and consequently will have less power against some alternatives.
406 citations
••
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center1, Harbin Medical University2, Seoul National University3, Yonsei University4, Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital5, Novartis6, Peking Union Medical College7, National Taiwan University8, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research9, Korea University10, New Cross Hospital11, University of Melbourne12, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven13
TL;DR: Compared with BSC, everolimus did not significantly improve overall survival for advanced gastric cancer that progressed after one or two lines of previous systemic chemotherapy and the safety profile observed for Everolimus was consistent with that observed forEverolimus in other cancers.
Abstract: Purpose The oral mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor everolimus demonstrated promising efficacy in a phase II study of pretreated advanced gastric cancer. This international, double-blind, phase III study compared everolimus efficacy and safety with that of best supportive care (BSC) in previously treated advanced gastric cancer. Patients and Methods Patients with advanced gastric cancer that progressed after one or two lines of systemic chemotherapy were randomly assigned to everolimus 10 mg/d (assignment schedule: 2:1) or matching placebo, both given with BSC. Randomization was stratified by previous chemotherapy lines (one v two) and region (Asia v rest of the world [ROW]). Treatment continued until disease progression or intolerable toxicity. Primary end point was overall survival (OS). Secondary end points included progression-free survival (PFS), overall response rate, and safety. Results Six hundred fifty-six patients (median age, 62.0 years; 73.6% male) were enrolled. Median OS was 5.4 months ...
405 citations
Authors
Showing all 40083 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Anil K. Jain | 183 | 1016 | 192151 |
Hyun-Chul Kim | 176 | 4076 | 183227 |
Yongsun Kim | 156 | 2588 | 145619 |
Jongmin Lee | 150 | 2257 | 134772 |
Byung-Sik Hong | 146 | 1557 | 105696 |
Daniel S. Berman | 141 | 1363 | 86136 |
Christof Koch | 141 | 712 | 105221 |
David Y. Graham | 138 | 1047 | 80886 |
Suyong Choi | 135 | 1495 | 97053 |
Rudolph E. Tanzi | 135 | 638 | 85376 |
Sung Keun Park | 133 | 1567 | 96933 |
Tae Jeong Kim | 132 | 1420 | 93959 |
Robert S. Brown | 130 | 1243 | 65822 |
Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin | 129 | 646 | 85630 |
Klaus-Robert Müller | 129 | 764 | 79391 |