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Institution

Stony Brook University

EducationStony Brook, New York, United States
About: Stony Brook University is a education organization based out in Stony Brook, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 32534 authors who have published 68218 publications receiving 3035131 citations. The organization is also known as: State University of New York at Stony Brook & SUNY Stony Brook.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
10 Dec 2012
TL;DR: A principled understanding of bit-rate adaptation is presented and a suite of techniques that can systematically guide the tradeoffs between stability, fairness, and efficiency are developed, which lead to a general framework for robust video adaptation.
Abstract: Many commercial video players rely on bitrate adaptation logic to adapt the bitrate in response to changing network conditions. Past measurement studies have identified issues with today's commercial players with respect to three key metrics---efficiency, fairness, and stability---when multiple bitrate-adaptive players share a bottleneck link. Unfortunately, our current understanding of why these effects occur and how they can be mitigated is quite limited.In this paper, we present a principled understanding of bitrate adaptation and analyze several commercial players through the lens of an abstract player model. Through this framework, we identify the root causes of several undesirable interactions that arise as a consequence of overlaying the video bitrate adaptation over HTTP. Building on these insights, we develop a suite of techniques that can systematically guide the tradeoffs between stability, fairness and efficiency and thus lead to a general framework for robust video adaptation. We pick one concrete instance from this design space and show that it significantly outperforms today's commercial players on all three key metrics across a range of experimental scenarios.

806 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A rapid increase in the incidence of infection and colonization with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) has been reported from U.S. hospitals in the last 5 years, and the lack of available antimicrobials for therapy of infections due to VRE poses several problems.

806 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A magnetotransport study of zirconium pentatelluride, ZrTe5, has been carried out in this paper, which reveals evidence for a chiral magnetic effect, a striking macroscopic manifestation of the quantum and relativistic nature of Weyl semimetals.
Abstract: A magnetotransport study of zirconium pentatelluride now reveals evidence for a chiral magnetic effect, a striking macroscopic manifestation of the quantum and relativistic nature of Weyl semimetals The chiral magnetic effect is the generation of an electric current induced by chirality imbalance in the presence of a magnetic field It is a macroscopic manifestation of the quantum anomaly1,2 in relativistic field theory of chiral fermions (massless spin 1/2 particles with a definite projection of spin on momentum)—a remarkable phenomenon arising from a collective motion of particles and antiparticles in the Dirac sea The recent discovery3,4,5,6 of Dirac semimetals with chiral quasiparticles opens a fascinating possibility to study this phenomenon in condensed matter experiments Here we report on the measurement of magnetotransport in zirconium pentatelluride, ZrTe5, that provides strong evidence for the chiral magnetic effect Our angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy experiments show that this material’s electronic structure is consistent with a three-dimensional Dirac semimetal We observe a large negative magnetoresistance when the magnetic field is parallel with the current The measured quadratic field dependence of the magnetoconductance is a clear indication of the chiral magnetic effect The observed phenomenon stems from the effective transmutation of a Dirac semimetal into a Weyl semimetal induced by parallel electric and magnetic fields that represent a topologically non-trivial gauge field background We expect that the chiral magnetic effect may emerge in a wide class of materials that are near the transition between the trivial and topological insulators

806 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Feb 2005-Nature
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the Omo I and Omo II hominid fossils are from similar stratigraphic levels in Member I of the Kibish Formation.
Abstract: In 1967 the Kibish Formation in southern Ethiopia yielded hominid cranial remains identified as early anatomically modern humans, assigned to Homo sapiens. However, the provenance and age of the fossils have been much debated. Here we confirm that the Omo I and Omo II hominid fossils are from similar stratigraphic levels in Member I of the Kibish Formation, despite the view that Omo I is more modern in appearance than Omo II. 40Ar/39Ar ages on feldspar crystals from pumice clasts within a tuff in Member I below the hominid levels place an older limit of 198 +/- 14 kyr (weighted mean age 196 +/- 2 kyr) on the hominids. A younger age limit of 104 +/- 7 kyr is provided by feldspars from pumice clasts in a Member III tuff. Geological evidence indicates rapid deposition of each member of the Kibish Formation. Isotopic ages on the Kibish Formation correspond to ages of Mediterranean sapropels, which reflect increased flow of the Nile River, and necessarily increased flow of the Omo River. Thus the 40Ar/39Ar age measurements, together with the sapropel correlations, indicate that the hominid fossils have an age close to the older limit. Our preferred estimate of the age of the Kibish hominids is 195 +/- 5 kyr, making them the earliest well-dated anatomically modern humans yet described.

805 citations

Patent
29 Jul 2005
TL;DR: Stapler as discussed by the authors is a body, an elongate, fixed jaw part connected to the body and including a curved anvil defining staple-forming pockets and a curved portion defining an opening bound on lateral and longitudinal sides.
Abstract: Stapler, in particular for hemorrhoidal use, includes a body, an elongate, fixed jaw part connected to the body and including a curved anvil defining staple-forming pockets and a curved portion defining an opening bound on lateral and longitudinal sides, an actuating jaw part including a curved staple driver and optionally a cutting knife, a trigger coupled to the body for actuating the actuating jaw part and an adjustment mechanism for moving the actuating jaw part to vary a longitudinal dimension of the opening defined between a staple cartridge and the anvil. When the actuating jaw part is actuated by the trigger, the staple driver forces staple blanks in the staple cartridge into staple-forming pockets of the anvil to form staples in tissue retained in the opening, while the cutting knife, when present, amputates the tissue.

804 citations


Authors

Showing all 32829 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Zhong Lin Wang2452529259003
Dennis W. Dickson1911243148488
Hyun-Chul Kim1764076183227
David Baker1731226109377
J. N. Butler1722525175561
Roderick T. Bronson169679107702
Nora D. Volkow165958107463
Jovan Milosevic1521433106802
Thomas E. Starzl150162591704
Paolo Boffetta148145593876
Jacques Banchereau14363499261
Larry R. Squire14347285306
John D. E. Gabrieli14248068254
Alexander Milov142114393374
Meenakshi Narain1421805147741
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023124
2022453
20213,609
20203,747
20193,426
20183,127