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Institution

Romanian Academy

ArchiveBucharest, Romania
About: Romanian Academy is a archive organization based out in Bucharest, Romania. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Nonlinear system. The organization has 3662 authors who have published 10491 publications receiving 146447 citations. The organization is also known as: Academia Română & Societatea Literară Română.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that Nox5 transcription variants and proteins are constitutively expressed in THP-1 cells and primary CD14(+) Mon, the first evidence that Nx5 is constitutically expressed in human Mon.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of the number of authors, the publication type and the selected journal on the citation count of soil erosion modeling research papers and found that the selection of the soil erosion model has the largest impact on the publication citations, followed by the modelling scale and the publication's CiteScore.

54 citations

Proceedings Article
01 May 2008
TL;DR: A collection of linguistic web services for Romanian and English, developed at the Research Institute for AI for the Romanian Academy (RACAI) which are ready to provide a standardized way of calling particular NLP operations and extract the results without caring about what exactly is going on in the background.
Abstract: Nowadays, there are hundreds of Natural Language Processing applications and resources for different languages that are developed and/or used, almost exclusively with a few but notable exceptions, by their creators. Assuming that the right to use a particular application or resource is licensed by the rightful owner, the user is faced with the often not so easy task of interfacing it with his/her own systems. Even if standards are defined that provide a unified way of encoding resources, few are the cases when the resources are actually coded in conformance to the standard (and, at present time, there is no such thing as general NLP application interoperability). Semantic Web came with the promise that the web will be a universal medium for information exchange whatever its content. In this context, the present article outlines a collection of linguistic web services for Romanian and English, developed at the Research Institute for AI for the Romanian Academy (RACAI) which are ready to provide a standardized way of calling particular NLP operations and extract the results without caring about what exactly is going on in the background.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article assessed the state-of-the-art of the topical literature with respect to various aspects of oak regeneration based on a refined list of 234 titles from the Web of Science database and identified a set of habitats fostering successful oak regeneration and recruitment without direct human support.
Abstract: Intensification and specialisation of agriculture and forest use has led to profound structural and compositional changes in European landscapes. In particular, sharp, narrow edges adjacent to relatively homogenous vegetation types progressively replace transitional habitats, crucial for a plethora of species and ecological processes. Quercus robur and Q. petraea regeneration niches make them best adapted to such transitional habitats. However, contemporary oaks’ importance, including their regeneration, is usually considered within limits of forest habitats. Defining habitats, landscape patterns and processes fostering oak regeneration and ‘oakscape’ development. We assessed the state-of-the art of the topical literature with respect to various aspects of oak regeneration based on a refined list of 234 titles from the Web of Science database. The review confirmed that the vast majority of studies focus on forest habitats, disregarding the fact that substantial part of acorns are being carried away and seeded by birds in non-forest habitats. The common acceptance of the simplistic landscape mosaic model, based on segregated homogenous vegetation categories and clear-cut lines separating patches, impedes proper assessment of landscape changes, referring to ‘untypical’, transitional habitats—the true oaks’ domain. Hence, restoring and sustaining European ‘oakscape’ should result from the overall landscape management, based on a better adapted gradient approach to landscape studies. Applying such an approach, we identified a set of habitats fostering successful oak regeneration and recruitment without direct human support, contributing to the contemporary ‘oakscape’, represented mostly by non-forest, either natural or anthropogenic habitats.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study reveals that correlating virulence profiles and infection clinical outcome is very useful for setting up efficient preventive and therapeutic procedures for hospitalized patients with chronic leg ulcers and positive P. aeruginosa cultures.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the virulence profiles of Pseudomonas aeruginosa clinical strains recently isolated from patients hospitalized for chronic leg ulcers in the Dermatology Department of Central Military Emergency University Hospital “Carol Davila”, Bucharest, Romania. The phenotypic screening evaluated eight soluble virulence factors (haemolysins, lecithinase, lipase, caseinase, gelatinase, amylase, DNase, aesculin hydrolysis), as well as adherence ability (Cravioto adapted method) and invasion capacity on HeLa cells (gentamicin protection assay). Seven virulence genes encoding for protease IV, 3 exoenzymes (exoS, exoT, exoU), two phospholipases plcH- haemolytic phospholipase C and plcN- non-haemolytic phospholipase C) and alginate were investigated by PCR. The pore forming toxins and enzymes were expressed in variable proportions, the majority of the tested strains producing beta haemolysin (92.3 %), lipase (76.9 %) and lecithinase (61.5 %). The most frequent virulence genes detected in the analyzed strains were the ExoT (100 %) and AlgD (92.3 %) genes, genes codifying for phospholipases (84.6 % each of them) and for protease IV (61.5 %). This study reveals that correlating virulence profiles and infection clinical outcome is very useful for setting up efficient preventive and therapeutic procedures for hospitalized patients with chronic leg ulcers and positive P. aeruginosa cultures.

53 citations


Authors

Showing all 3740 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Cristina Popescu7428518434
Adrian Covic7357017379
Gheorghe Paun6539918513
Floriana Tuna6027111968
Arto Salomaa5637417706
Jan A. Bergstra5561613436
Alexandru T. Balaban5360514225
Cristian Sminchisescu5317312268
Maya Simionescu4719210608
Marius Andruh462398431
Werner Scheid465189186
Vicenţiu D. Rădulescu463607771
Cornelia Vasile442977108
Irinel Popescu444018448
Mihail Barboiu442395789
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202335
2022113
2021672
2020690
2019704
2018630