Institution
National University of La Plata
Education•La Plata, Argentina•
About: National University of La Plata is a education organization based out in La Plata, Argentina. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Stars. The organization has 12993 authors who have published 30013 publications receiving 495118 citations. The organization is also known as: UNLP & Universidad Nacional de La Plata.
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TL;DR: It is proposed that expanding foraging studies to consider the community of vectors will substantially increase the understanding of Chagas disease transmission ecology and measures that are directed at disrupting the contact between humans and kissing-bugs, such as housing improvement, are among the most desirable strategies for Chags disease control.
Abstract: Host use by vectors is important in understanding the transmission of zoonotic diseases, which can affect humans, wildlife and domestic animals. Here, a synthesis of host exploitation patterns by kissing-bugs, vectors of Chagas disease, is presented. For this synthesis, an extensive literature review restricted to feeding sources analysed by precipitin tests was conducted. Modern tools from community ecology and multivariate statistics were used to determine patterns of segregation in host use. Rather than innate preferences for host species, host use by kissing-bugs is influenced by the habitats they colonise. One of the major limitations of studies on kissing-bug foraging has been the exclusive focus on the dominant vector species. We propose that expanding foraging studies to consider the community of vectors will substantially increase the understanding of Chagas disease transmission ecology. Our results indicate that host accessibility is a major factor that shapes the blood-foraging patterns of kissing-bugs. Therefore, from an applied perspective, measures that are directed at disrupting the contact between humans and kissing-bugs, such as housing improvement, are among the most desirable strategies for Chagas disease control.
95 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis of events containing jets including at least one $b$-tagged jet, sizeable missing transverse momentum, and at least two leptons including a pair of the same electric charge, with the scalar sum of the jet and lepton transverse momenta being large.
Abstract: An analysis is presented of events containing jets including at least one $b$-tagged jet, sizeable missing transverse momentum, and at least two leptons including a pair of the same electric charge, with the scalar sum of the jet and lepton transverse momenta being large. A data sample with an integrated luminosity of 20.3 fb$^{-1}$ of $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 8$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider is used. Standard Model processes rarely produce these final states, but there are several models of physics beyond the Standard Model that predict an enhanced rate of production of such events; the ones considered here are production of vector-like quarks, enhanced four-top-quark production, pair production of chiral $b^\prime$-quarks, and production of two positively charged top quarks. Eleven signal regions are defined; subsets of these regions are combined when searching for each class of models. In the three signal regions primarily sensitive to positively charged top quark pair production, the data yield is consistent with the background expectation. There are more data events than expected from background in the set of eight signal regions defined for searching for vector-like quarks and chiral $b^\prime$-quarks, but the significance of the discrepancy is less than two standard deviations. The discrepancy reaches 2.5 standard deviations in the set of five signal regions defined for searching for four-top-quark production. The results are used to set 95% CL limits on various models.
95 citations
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TL;DR: Gutierrez et al. as discussed by the authors presented a study of the relationship between education and technology in La Araucania (Chile) and Chile, focusing on the following topics:
95 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors mapped the repartition of the Quaternary coastal sequences in Argentinean Patagonia, secured accurate altitudes of shoreline angles associated with erosional morphologies (i.e., marine terraces and notches), and took into account previous chrono-stratigraphical interpretations in order to calculate mean uplift rates since ~440 ka (MIS 11) and proposed age ranges for the higher and older features (up to ~180 m).
94 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the quantum critical behavior of the transition of a two-dimensional Fermi fluid to a nematic state which breaks spontaneously the rotational invariance of the FermI liquid.
Abstract: We discuss shape (Pomeranchuk) instabilities of the Fermi surface of a two-dimensional Fermi system using bosonization. We consider in detail the quantum critical behavior of the transition of a two-dimensional Fermi fluid to a nematic state which breaks spontaneously the rotational invariance of the Fermi liquid. We show that higher dimensional bosonization reproduces the quantum critical behavior expected from the Hertz-Millis analysis, and verify that this theory has dynamic critical exponent $z=3$. Going beyond this framework, we study the behavior of the fermion degrees of freedom directly, and show that at quantum criticality as well as in the quantum nematic phase (except along a set of measure zero of symmetry-dictated directions) the quasiparticles of the normal Fermi liquid are generally wiped out. Instead, they exhibit short-ranged spatial correlations that decay faster than any power law, with the law $\ensuremath{\mid}x{\ensuremath{\mid}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}\mathrm{exp}(\ensuremath{-}\mathrm{const}\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\ensuremath{\mid}x{\ensuremath{\mid}}^{1∕3})$ and we verify explicitly the vanishing of the fermion residue utilizing this expression. In contrast, the fermion autocorrelation function has the behavior $\ensuremath{\mid}t{\ensuremath{\mid}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}\mathrm{exp}(\ensuremath{-}\mathrm{const}\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\ensuremath{\mid}t{\ensuremath{\mid}}^{\ensuremath{-}2∕3})$. In this regime we also find that, at low frequency, the single-particle fermion density of states behaves as ${N}^{*}(\ensuremath{\omega})={N}^{*}(0)+B{\ensuremath{\omega}}^{2∕3}\mathrm{ln}\ensuremath{\omega}+\ensuremath{\cdots}$, where ${N}^{*}(0)$ is larger than the free Fermi value, $N(0)$, and $B$ is a constant. These results confirm the non-Fermi liquid nature of both the quantum critical theory and of the nematic phase.
94 citations
Authors
Showing all 13198 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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David Cameron | 154 | 1586 | 126067 |
Subir Sarkar | 149 | 1542 | 144614 |
Mayda Velasco | 137 | 1309 | 87579 |
Diego F. Torres | 137 | 948 | 72180 |
Heidi Sandaker | 128 | 999 | 76517 |
Vincent Garonne | 128 | 921 | 76980 |
Farid Ould-Saada | 128 | 931 | 76394 |
Ole Røhne | 128 | 1038 | 75752 |
Peter Hansen | 128 | 1271 | 86210 |
Maria-Teresa Dova | 127 | 778 | 73558 |
Vladimir Sulin | 127 | 884 | 75329 |
Andrei Snesarev | 127 | 875 | 74907 |
James Catmore | 127 | 892 | 75086 |
Ruslan Mashinistov | 126 | 860 | 73897 |
Fernando Monticelli | 126 | 843 | 73385 |