scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Philips

CompanyVantaa, Finland
About: Philips is a company organization based out in Vantaa, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Layer (electronics). The organization has 68260 authors who have published 99663 publications receiving 1882329 citations. The organization is also known as: Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. & Royal Philips Electronics.


Papers
More filters
Patent
08 Jan 2001
TL;DR: In this paper, a dual switching signal composed of low frequency bursts of high frequency pulses is applied to the control switch to vary the average current through the LED lighting module in order to varying the light intensity outputted by the lighting module.
Abstract: A supply assembly for an LED lighting module includes a control switch for supplying a constant current to the LED lighting module. A dual switching signal composed of low frequency bursts of high frequency pulses is applied to the control switch. By varying the low frequency component of the dual switching signal, the average current through the LED lighting module may be varied in order to vary the light intensity outputted by the LED lighting module.

239 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
28 Oct 2007
TL;DR: A new error-resilient privacy-preserving string searching protocol that allows to execute any finite state machine in an oblivious manner, requiring a communication complexity which is linear both in the number of states and the length of the input string.
Abstract: Human Desoxyribo-Nucleic Acid (DNA) sequences offer a wealth of information that reveal, among others, predisposition to various diseases and paternity relations. The breadth and personalized nature of this information highlights the need for privacy-preserving protocols. In this paper, we present a new error-resilient privacy-preserving string searching protocol that is suitable for running private DNA queries. This protocol checks if a short template (e.g., a string that describes a mutation leading to a disease), known to one party, is present inside a DNA sequence owned by another party, accounting for possible errors and without disclosing to each party the other party's input. Each query is formulated as a regular expression over a finite alphabet and implemented as an automaton. As the main technical contribution, we provide a protocol that allows to execute any finite state machine in an oblivious manner, requiring a communication complexity which is linear both in the number of states and the length of the input string.

239 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Wjm van Bommel1, GJ van den Beld1
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that it can be beneficial to be able to adapt both the level and the colour of the lighting, and not only the light on the visual task, but also that entering the eye determines the overall quality of lighting.
Abstract: With the detection in 2002 of a novel photoreceptor cell in the eye, the biological effects that light has can be better understood. From the research on the biological effects of lighting, it is evident that the rules governing the design of good and healthy lighting installations are, to a certain degree, different from the conventionally held rules. We demonstrate that it can be beneficial to be able to adapt both the level and the colour of the lighting. Not only the light on the visual task, but also that entering the eye determines the overall quality of lighting. In a working environment, not only are the advantages in terms of health and wellbeing important for the workers themselves, they also lead to better work performance, fewer errors, better safety, and lower absenteeism.

239 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of the present oral and IV study indicates very low oral bioavailability and slow tissue elimination and limited uptake in combination with slow elimination might result in the long run in potential tissue accumulation.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to obtain kinetic data that can be used in human risk assessment of titanium dioxide nanomaterials. Tissue distribution and blood kinetics of various titanium dioxide nanoparticles (NM-100, NM-101, NM-102, NM-103, and NM-104), which differ with respect to primary particle size, crystalline form and hydrophobicity, were investigated in rats up to 90 days post-exposure after oral and intravenous administration of a single or five repeated doses. For the oral study, liver, spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes were selected as target tissues for titanium (Ti) analysis. Ti-levels in liver and spleen were above the detection limit only in some rats. Titanium could be detected at low levels in mesenteric lymph nodes. These results indicate that some minor absorption occurs in the gastrointestinal tract, but to a very limited extent. Both after single and repeated intravenous (IV) exposure, titanium rapidly distributed from the systemic circulation to all tissues evaluated (i.e. liver, spleen, kidney, lung, heart, brain, thymus, reproductive organs). Liver was identified as the main target tissue, followed by spleen and lung. Total recovery (expressed as % of nominal dose) for all four tested nanomaterials measured 24 h after single or repeated exposure ranged from 64-95% or 59-108% for male or female animals, respectively. During the 90 days post-exposure period, some decrease in Ti-levels was observed (mainly for NM-100 and NM-102) with a maximum relative decrease of 26%. This was also confirmed by the results of the kinetic analysis which revealed that for each of the investigated tissues the half-lifes were considerable (range 28–650 days, depending on the TiO2-particle and tissue investigated). Minor differences in kinetic profile were observed between the various particles, though these could not be clearly related to differences in primary particle size or hydrophobicity. Some indications were observed for an effect of crystalline form (anatase vs. rutile) on total Ti recovery. Overall, the results of the present oral and IV study indicates very low oral bioavailability and slow tissue elimination. Limited uptake in combination with slow elimination might result in the long run in potential tissue accumulation.

239 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the development of a product family requires product architectures in three domains, defining the required function, technological realisation and the physical realisation, and support their arguments through an example.

239 citations


Authors

Showing all 68268 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mark Raymond Adams1471187135038
Dario R. Alessi13635474753
Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin12964685630
Sanjay Kumar120205282620
Mark W. Dewhirst11679757525
Carl G. Figdor11656652145
Mathias Fink11690051759
David B. Solit11446952340
Giulio Tononi11451158519
Jie Wu112153756708
Claire M. Fraser10835276292
Michael F. Berger10754052426
Nikolaus Schultz106297120240
Rolf Müller10490550027
Warren J. Manning10260638781
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
176.5K papers, 6.2M citations

91% related

Georgia Institute of Technology
119K papers, 4.6M citations

88% related

Stanford University
320.3K papers, 21.8M citations

88% related

National University of Singapore
165.4K papers, 5.4M citations

88% related

IBM
253.9K papers, 7.4M citations

88% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20235
202239
2021898
20201,428
20191,665
20181,378