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Institution

Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg

EducationHalle, Germany
About: Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg is a education organization based out in Halle, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Liquid crystal. The organization has 20232 authors who have published 38773 publications receiving 965004 citations. The organization is also known as: MLU & University of Wittenberg.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a comprehensive intercomparison of this type (multimethod, multilab, and multisample), focusing mainly on methods used for soil and sediment BC studies.
Abstract: Black carbon (BC), the product of incomplete combustion of fossil fuels and biomass (called elemental carbon (EC) in atmospheric sciences), was quantified in 12 different materials by 17 laboratories from different disciplines, using seven different methods. The materials were divided into three classes: (1) potentially interfering materials, (2) laboratory-produced BC-rich materials, and (3) BC-containing environmental matrices (from soil, water, sediment, and atmosphere). This is the first comprehensive intercomparison of this type (multimethod, multilab, and multisample), focusing mainly on methods used for soil and sediment BC studies. Results for the potentially interfering materials (which by definition contained no fire-derived organic carbon) highlighted situations where individual methods may overestimate BC concentrations. Results for the BC-rich materials (one soot and two chars) showed that some of the methods identified most of the carbon in all three materials as BC, whereas other methods identified only soot carbon as BC. The different methods also gave widely different BC contents for the environmental matrices. However, these variations could be understood in the light of the findings for the other two groups of materials, i.e., that some methods incorrectly identify non-BC carbon as BC, and that the detection efficiency of each technique varies across the BC continuum. We found that atmospheric BC quantification methods are not ideal for soil and sediment studies as in their methodology these incorporate the definition of BC as light-absorbing material irrespective of its origin, leading to biases when applied to terrestrial and sedimentary materials. This study shows that any attempt to merge data generated via different methods must consider the different, operationally defined analytical windows of the BC continuum detected by each technique, as well as the limitations and potential biases of each technique. A major goal of this ring trial was to provide a basis on which to choose between the different BC quantification methods in soil and sediment studies. In this paper we summarize the advantages and disadvantages of each method. In future studies, we strongly recommend the evaluation of all methods analyzing for BC in soils and sediments against the set of BC reference materials analyzed here.

769 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Data from earlier research demonstrate that HRV is a promising approach for evaluating stress and emotional states in animals, and has the potential to contribute much to the understanding and assessment of the underlying neurophysiological processes of stress responses and different welfare states in farm animals.

766 citations

Posted ContentDOI
23 Feb 2016-bioRxiv
TL;DR: A collaborative effort in which a centralized analysis pipeline is applied to a SCZ cohort, finding support at a suggestive level for nine additional candidate susceptibility and protective loci, which consist predominantly of CNVs mediated by non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR).
Abstract: Genomic copy number variants (CNVs) have been strongly implicated in the etiology of schizophrenia (SCZ). However, apart from a small number of risk variants, elucidation of the CNV contribution to risk has been difficult due to the rarity of risk alleles, all occurring in less than 1% of cases. We sought to address this obstacle through a collaborative effort in which we applied a centralized analysis pipeline to a SCZ cohort of 21,094 cases and 20,227 controls. We observed a global enrichment of CNV burden in cases (OR=1.11, P=5.7e-15), which persisted after excluding loci implicated in previous studies (OR=1.07, P=1.7e-6). CNV burden is also enriched for genes associated with synaptic function (OR = 1.68, P = 2.8e-11) and neurobehavioral phenotypes in mouse (OR = 1.18, P= 7.3e-5). We identified genome-wide significant support for eight loci, including 1q21.1, 2p16.3 (NRXN1), 3q29, 7q11.2, 15q13.3, distal 16p11.2, proximal 16p11.2 and 22q11.2. We find support at a suggestive level for nine additional candidate susceptibility and protective loci, which consist predominantly of CNVs mediated by non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR).

764 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview on the recent developments in the field of liquid crystalline bent-core molecules (so-called banana liquid crystals) is given in this article, dealing with general aspects of the systematisation of the mesophases, development of polar order and chirality in this class of LC systems and explaining some general structure-property relationships.
Abstract: An overview on the recent developments in the field of liquid crystalline bent-core molecules (so-called banana liquid crystals) is given. After some basic issues, dealing with general aspects of the systematisation of the mesophases, development of polar order and chirality in this class of LC systems and explaining some general structure–property relationships, we focus on fascinating new developments in this field, such as modulated, undulated and columnar phases, so-called B7 phases, phase biaxiality, ferroelectric and antiferroelectric polar order in smectic and columnar phases, amplification and switching of chirality and the spontaneous formation of superstructural and supramolecular chirality.

753 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Jo Ann Banks1, Tomoaki Nishiyama2, Mitsuyasu Hasebe3, Mitsuyasu Hasebe4, John L. Bowman5, John L. Bowman6, Michael Gribskov1, Claude W. dePamphilis7, Victor A. Albert8, Naoki Aono3, Tsuyoshi Aoyama3, Tsuyoshi Aoyama4, Barbara A. Ambrose9, Neil W. Ashton10, Michael J. Axtell7, Elizabeth I. Barker10, Michael S. Barker11, Jeffrey L. Bennetzen12, Nicholas D. Bonawitz1, Clint Chapple1, Chaoyang Cheng, Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa13, Michael Dacre14, Jeremy D. DeBarry12, Ingo Dreyer13, Marek Eliáš15, Eric M. Engstrom16, Mark Estelle17, Liang Feng12, Cédric Finet18, Sandra K. Floyd6, Wolf B. Frommer19, Tomomichi Fujita20, Lydia Gramzow21, Michael Gutensohn22, Michael Gutensohn1, Jesper Harholt23, Mitsuru Hattori24, Mitsuru Hattori25, Alexander Heyl26, Tadayoshi Hirai27, Yuji Hiwatashi4, Yuji Hiwatashi3, Masaki Ishikawa, Mineko Iwata, Kenneth G. Karol9, Barbara Koehler13, Uener Kolukisaoglu28, Uener Kolukisaoglu29, Minoru Kubo, Tetsuya Kurata30, Sylvie Lalonde19, Kejie Li1, Ying Li31, Ying Li1, Amy Litt9, Eric Lyons32, Gerard Manning14, Takeshi Maruyama20, Todd P. Michael33, Koji Mikami20, Saori Miyazaki3, Saori Miyazaki34, Shin-Ichi Morinaga3, Shin-Ichi Morinaga25, TakashiMurata3, TakashiMurata4, Bernd Mueller-Roeber35, David R. Nelson36, Mari Obara, Yasuko Oguri, Richard G. Olmstead37, Naoko T. Onodera38, Bent O. Petersen23, Birgit Pils39, Michael J. Prigge17, Stefan A. Rensing40, Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón35, Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón41, Alison W. Roberts42, Yoshikatsu Sato, Henrik Vibe Scheller32, Henrik Vibe Scheller43, Burkhard Schulz1, Christian Schulz44, Eugene V. Shakirov45, Nakako Shibagaki46, Naoki Shinohara20, Dorothy E. Shippen45, Iben Sørensen23, Iben Sørensen47, Ryo Sotooka20, Nagisa Sugimoto, Mamoru Sugita24, Naomi Sumikawa3, Milos Tanurdzic48, Günter Theißen21, Peter Ulvskov23, Sachiko Wakazuki, Jing-Ke Weng1, Jing-Ke Weng14, William G.T. Willats23, Daniel Wipf49, Paul G. Wolf50, Lixing Yang12, Andreas Zimmer40, Qihui Zhu12, Therese Mitros32, Uffe Hellsten51, Dominique Loqué43, Robert Otillar51, Asaf Salamov51, Jeremy Schmutz51, Harris Shapiro51, Erika Lindquist51, Susan Lucas51, Daniel S. Rokhsar51, Daniel S. Rokhsar32, Igor V. Grigoriev51 
20 May 2011-Science
TL;DR: The genome sequence of the lycophyte Selaginella moellendorffii (Selaginella), the first nonseed vascular plant genome reported, is reported, finding that the transition from a gametophytes- to a sporophyte-dominated life cycle required far fewer new genes than the Transition from a non Seed vascular to a flowering plant.
Abstract: Vascular plants appeared ~410 million years ago, then diverged into several lineages of which only two survive: the euphyllophytes (ferns and seed plants) and the lycophytes. We report here the genome sequence of the lycophyte Selaginella moellendorffii (Selaginella), the first nonseed vascular plant genome reported. By comparing gene content in evolutionarily diverse taxa, we found that the transition from a gametophyte- to a sporophyte-dominated life cycle required far fewer new genes than the transition from a nonseed vascular to a flowering plant, whereas secondary metabolic genes expanded extensively and in parallel in the lycophyte and angiosperm lineages. Selaginella differs in posttranscriptional gene regulation, including small RNA regulation of repetitive elements, an absence of the trans-acting small interfering RNA pathway, and extensive RNA editing of organellar genes.

750 citations


Authors

Showing all 20466 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Niels Birbaumer14283577853
Michael Schmitt1342007114667
Niels E. Skakkebæk12759659925
Stefan D. Anker117415104945
Pedro W. Crous11580951925
Eric Verdin11537047971
Bernd Nilius11249644812
Josep Tabernero11180368982
Hans-Dieter Volk10778446622
Dan Rujescu10655260406
John I. Nurnberger10552251402
Ulrich Gösele10260346223
Wolfgang J. Parak10246943307
Martin F. Bachmann10041534124
Munir Pirmohamed9767539822
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202397
2022331
20212,038
20202,007
20191,617
20181,604