Institution
Louisiana State University
Education•Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States•
About: Louisiana State University is a education organization based out in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 40206 authors who have published 76587 publications receiving 2566076 citations. The organization is also known as: LSU & Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Gene, Context (language use), Wetland
Papers published on a yearly basis
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Oregon State University1, Yale University2, Duke University3, Clark University4, University of Tennessee5, Kaiserslautern University of Technology6, Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures7, University of Copenhagen8, University of Tabriz9, Harvard University10, University of Pretoria11, ATCC12, Louisiana State University13, University of Texas at Austin14, Aberystwyth University15, United States Department of Agriculture16, Field Museum of Natural History17, Pennsylvania State University18, University of California, Berkeley19, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill20, Stellenbosch University21, Free University of Berlin22, Washington State University23, Brandon University24, Landcare Research25, University of Helsinki26, University of Giessen27, University of Nottingham28, Swedish Museum of Natural History29, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh30
TL;DR: A 6-gene, 420-species maximum-likelihood phylogeny of Ascomycota, the largest phylum of Fungi, and a phylogenetic informativeness analysis of all 6 genes and a series of ancestral character state reconstructions support a terrestrial, saprobic ecology as ancestral are presented.
Abstract: We present a 6-gene, 420-species maximum-likelihood phylogeny of Ascomycota, the largest phylum of Fungi. This analysis is the most taxonomically complete to date with species sampled from all 15 currently circumscribed classes. A number of superclass-level nodes that have previously evaded resolution and were unnamed in classifications of the Fungi are resolved for the first time. Based on the 6-gene phylogeny we conducted a phylogenetic informativeness analysis of all 6 genes and a series of ancestral character state reconstructions that focused on morphology of sporocarps, ascus dehiscence, and evolution of nutritional modes and ecologies. A gene-by-gene assessment of phylogenetic informativeness yielded higher levels of informativeness for protein genes (RPB1, RPB2, and TEF1) as compared with the ribosomal genes, which have been the standard bearer in fungal systematics. Our reconstruction of sporocarp characters is consistent with 2 origins for multicellular sexual reproductive structures in Ascomycota, once in the common ancestor of Pezizomycotina and once in the common ancestor of Neolectomycetes. This first report of dual origins of ascomycete sporocarps highlights the complicated nature of assessing homology of morphological traits across Fungi. Furthermore, ancestral reconstruction supports an open sporocarp with an exposed hymenium (apothecium) as the primitive morphology for Pezizomycotina with multiple derivations of the partially (perithecia) or completely enclosed (cleistothecia) sporocarps. Ascus dehiscence is most informative at the class level within Pezizomycotina with most superclass nodes reconstructed equivocally. Character-state reconstructions support a terrestrial, saprobic ecology as ancestral. In contrast to previous studies, these analyses support multiple origins of lichenization events with the loss of lichenization as less frequent and limited to terminal, closely related species.
592 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors use a bargaining framework to examine empirically the relations between director compensation and board-of-directors independence, finding that independent directors have a bargaining advantage over the CEO that results in compensation more closely aligned with shareholders' objectives.
589 citations
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TL;DR: A systematic review of the unpublished and published, peer-reviewed literature examining the relationship between interpersonal theory constructs and suicidal thoughts and behaviors supported the interpersonal theory; and alternative configurations of theory variables were similarly useful for predicting suicide risk as theory-consistent pathways.
Abstract: Over the past decade, the interpersonal theory of suicide has contributed to substantial advances in the scientific and clinical understanding of suicide and related conditions. The interpersonal theory of suicide posits that suicidal desire emerges when individuals experience intractable feelings of perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness and near-lethal or lethal suicidal behavior occurs in the presence of suicidal desire and capability for suicide. A growing number of studies have tested these posited pathways in various samples; however, these findings have yet to be evaluated meta-analytically. This paper aimed to (a) conduct a systematic review of the unpublished and published, peer-reviewed literature examining the relationship between interpersonal theory constructs and suicidal thoughts and behaviors, (b) conduct meta-analyses testing the interpersonal theory hypotheses, and (c) evaluate the influence of various moderators on these relationships. Four electronic bibliographic databases were searched through the end of March, 2016: PubMed, Medline, PsycINFO, and Web of Science. Hypothesis-driven meta-analyses using random effects models were conducted using 122 distinct unpublished and published samples. Findings supported the interpersonal theory: the interaction between thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness was significantly associated with suicidal ideation; and the interaction between thwarted belongingness, perceived burdensomeness, and capability for suicide was significantly related to a greater number of prior suicide attempts. However, effect sizes for these interactions were modest. Alternative configurations of theory variables were similarly useful for predicting suicide risk as theory-consistent pathways. We conclude with limitations and recommendations for the interpersonal theory as a framework for understanding the suicidal spectrum. (PsycINFO Database Record
588 citations
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TL;DR: It is concluded that biological membranes and other tissue hydrophobic compartments are important sites for disappearance of NO and for formation of NO-derived reactive species and that attenuation of these potentially damaging reactions is an important protective action of lipid-soluble antioxidants such as vitamin E.
Abstract: We demonstrate herein dramatic acceleration of aqueous nitric oxide (NO) reaction with O2 within the hydrophobic region of either phospholipid or biological membranes or detergent micelles and demonstrate that the presence of a distinct hydrophobic phase is required. Per unit volume, at low amounts of hydrophobic phase, the reaction of NO with O2 within the membranes is approximately 300 times more rapid than in the surrounding aqueous medium. In tissue, even though the membrane represents only 3% of the total volume, we calculate that 90% of NO reaction with O2 will occur there. We conclude that biological membranes and other tissue hydrophobic compartments are important sites for disappearance of NO and for formation of NO-derived reactive species and that attenuation of these potentially damaging reactions is an important protective action of lipid-soluble antioxidants such as vitamin E.
587 citations
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TL;DR: The selective catalytic conversion of biomass-derived syngas into ethanol is thermodynamically feasible at temperatures below roughly 350 degrees C at 30 bar, but if methane is allowed as a reaction product, the conversion to ethanol (or other oxygenates) is extremely limited.
Abstract: The selective catalytic conversion of biomass-derived syngas into ethanol is thermodynamically feasible at temperatures below roughly 350 °C at 30 bar. However, if methane is allowed as a reaction product, the conversion to ethanol (or other oxygenates) is extremely limited. Experimental results show that high selectivities to ethanol are only achieved at very low conversions, typically less than 10%. The most promising catalysts for the synthesis of ethanol are based on Rh, though some other formulations (such as modified methanol synthesis catalysts) show promise. (Critical review—173 references.)
586 citations
Authors
Showing all 40485 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
H. S. Chen | 179 | 2401 | 178529 |
John A. Rogers | 177 | 1341 | 127390 |
Omar M. Yaghi | 165 | 459 | 163918 |
Barry M. Popkin | 157 | 751 | 90453 |
John E. Morley | 154 | 1377 | 97021 |
Claude Bouchard | 153 | 1076 | 115307 |
Ruth J. F. Loos | 142 | 647 | 92485 |
Ali Khademhosseini | 140 | 887 | 76430 |
Shanhui Fan | 139 | 1292 | 82487 |
Joseph E. LeDoux | 139 | 478 | 91500 |
Christopher T. Walsh | 139 | 819 | 74314 |
Kenneth A. Dodge | 138 | 468 | 79640 |
Steven B. Heymsfield | 132 | 679 | 77220 |
George A. Bray | 131 | 896 | 100975 |
Zhanhu Guo | 128 | 886 | 53378 |