Institution
Matej Bel University
Education•Banská Bystrica, Slovakia•
About: Matej Bel University is a education organization based out in Banská Bystrica, Slovakia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Tourism & Fuzzy set. The organization has 721 authors who have published 1497 publications receiving 11573 citations. The organization is also known as: Matej Bel & Univerzita Mateja Bela.
Topics: Tourism, Fuzzy set, Population, Context (language use), Higher education
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, an equation of state of cold nuclear matter with an arbitrary isotopic composition is studied within a relativistic mean-field approach with hadron masses and coupling constants depending self-consistently on the scalar mean field.
70 citations
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University of Wrocław1, Arizona State University2, University of Social Sciences and Humanities3, University of Washington4, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences5, King Saud University6, University of Ghana7, University of Milan8, The Chinese University of Hong Kong9, University of Zurich10, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro11, Russian Academy of Sciences12, Russian State University for the Humanities13, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte14, Ankara University15, University of Coimbra16, Babeș-Bolyai University17, Universidad Iberoamericana Ciudad de México18, İzmir University of Economics19, Saint Mary's University20, Cumhuriyet University21, University of Warsaw22, University of Zagreb23, Akdeniz University24, Federal Neuro Psychiatric Hospital25, Central University of Finance and Economics26, University of Nairobi27, Opole University28, University of Granada29, University of Pécs30, Razi University31, University of Science and Culture32, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro33, Makerere University Business School34, Adekunle Ajasin University35, Universiti Utara Malaysia36, University of Nigeria, Nsukka37, Istanbul University38, University of Warwick39, University of Tartu40, University of Karachi41, SAS Institute42, University of Amsterdam43, South-West University "Neofit Rilski"44, Matej Bel University45, Indonesia University of Education46, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore47, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati48, Kyung Hee University49, Dresden University of Technology50
TL;DR: This paper measured marital satisfaction and several factors that might potentially correlate with it based on self-report data from individuals across 33 countries and introduced the raw data available for anybody interested in further examining any relations between them and other country-level scores obtained elsewhere.
Abstract: Forms of committed relationships, including formal marriage arrangements between men and women, exist in almost every culture (Bell, 1997). Yet, similarly to many other psychological constructs (Henrich et al., 2010), marital satisfaction and its correlates have been investigated almost exclusively in Western countries (e.g., Bradbury et al., 2000). Meanwhile, marital relationships are heavily guided by culturally determined norms, customs, and expectations (for review see Berscheid, 1995; Fiske et al., 1998). While we acknowledge the differences existing both between- and within-cultures, we measured marital satisfaction and several factors that might potentially correlate with it based on self-report data from individuals across 33 countries. The purpose of this paper is to introduce the raw data available for anybody interested in further examining any relations between them and other country-level scores obtained elsewhere. Below, we review the central variables that are likely to be related to marital satisfaction
69 citations
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TL;DR: A simple understandable model linking the categorical variable “city size” to a group of smart city indicators is found and the most significant indicators of smart cities that can divide smart cities into size categories are identified with impressive 96.2% correct classification.
69 citations
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TL;DR: Spectroscopic analyses and TD‐DFT calculations are employed to reveal changing solvatochromic shifts and energies of the species involved in DASA photoswitching and suggest that the primary photochemical step remains the same, irrespective of the polarity and protic nature of the solvent.
Abstract: Donor-acceptor Stenhouse adducts (DASAs) are negative photochromes that switch with visible light and are highly promising for applications ranging from smart materials to biological systems. However, the strong solvent dependence of the photoswitching kinetics limits their application. The nature of the photoswitching mechanism in different solvents is key for addressing the solvatochromism of DASAs, but as yet has remained elusive. Here, we employ spectroscopic analyses and TD-DFT calculations to reveal changing solvatochromic shifts and energies of the species involved in DASA photoswitching. Time-resolved visible pump-probe spectroscopy suggests that the primary photochemical step remains the same, irrespective of the polarity and protic nature of the solvent. Disentangling the different factors determining the solvent-dependence of DASA photoswitching, presented here, is crucial for the rational development of applications in a wide range of different media.
66 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the habitats of Natura 2000 Sites by a set of landscape metrics for habitat area, size, density, and shape, such as Number of patches (NP), Patch density (PD), Mean patch size (MPS), Patch size standard deviation (PSSD), and Mean shape index (MSI).
Abstract: The Sitno Natura 2000 Site covers an area of 935,56 hectares. The Sitno region is significant due to the number of rare and endangered species of plants, and as a result is considered a location of great importance to the maintenance of floral gene pools. The study area suffers human impacts in the form of tourism. The main purpose of this study is to the measure landscape elements, determine the ecological significance of habitats within the Sitno area, and from this data, organize the study area into conservation zones. The results of this landscape quantification are numerical values that can be used to interpret the quality of ongoing ecological processes within individual landscape types. Interpretation of this quantified data can be used to determine the ecological significance of landscapes in other study areas. This research examines the habitats of Natura 2000 Sites by a set of landscape metrics for habitat area, size, density, and shape, such as Number of patches (NP), Patch density (PD), Mean patch size (MPS), Patch size standard deviation (PSSD) and Mean shape index (MSI). The classification of land cover patches is based on the Annex Code system.
65 citations
Authors
Showing all 749 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Gareth Jones | 91 | 655 | 30290 |
Michal Meres | 71 | 260 | 14850 |
Alexander Rosa | 30 | 127 | 2741 |
Robert Zaleśny | 25 | 95 | 1658 |
Ľubomír Švorc | 25 | 92 | 1636 |
Evgeni E. Kolomeitsev | 24 | 96 | 2727 |
Heribert Reis | 23 | 56 | 1130 |
Ivan Černušák | 20 | 96 | 1362 |
Beloslav Riečan | 19 | 89 | 1123 |
Boris Tomasik | 16 | 138 | 792 |
Peter Pristaš | 16 | 138 | 1110 |
Juraj Nemec | 15 | 179 | 1125 |
Polina Lemenkova | 15 | 105 | 743 |
Uglješa Stankov | 15 | 68 | 717 |
Roman Nedela | 15 | 31 | 765 |