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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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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an investigation was made of the relations among porosity, permeability, and texture of artificially mixed and packed sand, to determine the approximate porosity and permeability values to be expected for unconsolidated sand of eight grain-size subclasses and six sorting groups.
Abstract: An investigation has been made of the relations among porosity, permeability, and texture of artificially mixed and packed sand, to determine the approximate porosity and permeability values to be expected for unconsolidated sand of eight grain-size subclasses and six sorting groups. The sand samples were prepared so that the weight fractions were distributed normally about the median grain size. Porosity values were determined for two packings, designated as "dry-loose" and "wet-packed." Porosity data for "wet-packed" sand samples remain about the same for changes in grain size of a given sorting, but decrease from an average of 42.4 percent for extremely well-sorted sand to 27.9 percent for very poorly sorted sand. These experimental data agree within 5 porosity percent with framework porosity values obtained for natural packing of 25 Holocene barrier-island sand samples of a limited size-sorting range, and appear to be representative of minimum porosities expected for natural packing of most unconsolidated, clay-free sand. The 48 artificially mixed and wet-packed experimental sands selected for porosity measurement also were used to determine permeability. Inasmuch as there are some irregularities in the experimental data caused by the inability to pack each sample uniformly, an average adjusted permeability value has been calculated. The average adjusted permeability values become progressively lower with decreasing grain size and poorer sorting, and agree well with permeability values computed by the Krumbein and Monk formula for most grain-size and sorting classes. Reference photographs or visual textural comparators enable a rapid estimation of grain shape, roundness, size, and sorting. Grain-size-sorting comparators, representing photomicrographs of thin sections of the porosity and permeability test samples, are especially useful in estimating original textural parameters form thin sections of severely compacted and silica-cemented sandstones.

734 citations

Book
11 Mar 1990
TL;DR: In a cross-cultural study of manhood as an achieved status, this article found that a culturally sanctioned stress on manliness -on toughness and aggressiveness, stoicism and sexuality -is almost universal, and deeply ingrained in the consciousness of men who otherwise have little in common.
Abstract: In this cross-cultural study of manhood as an achieved status, the author finds that a culturally sanctioned stress on manliness - on toughness and aggressiveness, stoicism and sexuality - is almost universal, and deeply ingrained in the consciousness of men who otherwise have little in common.

733 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a combined fit to global neutrino oscillation data available as of fall 2016 in the scenario of three-neutrinos oscillations was performed and the allowed ranges of the six oscillation parameters were presented.
Abstract: We perform a combined fit to global neutrino oscillation data available as of fall 2016 in the scenario of three-neutrino oscillations and present updated allowed ranges of the six oscillation parameters. We discuss the differences arising between the consistent combination of the data samples from accelerator and reactor experiments compared to partial combinations. We quantify the confidence in the determination of the less precisely known parameters θ 23, δ CP, and the neutrino mass ordering by performing a Monte Carlo study of the long baseline accelerator and reactor data. We find that the sensitivity to the mass ordering and the θ 23 octant is below 1σ. Maximal θ 23 mixing is allowed at slightly more than 90% CL. The best fit for the CP violating phase is around 270°, CP conservation is allowed at slightly above 1σ, and values of δ CP ≃ 90° are disfavored at around 99% CL for normal ordering and higher CL for inverted ordering.

730 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: PED offers a reasonably safe and effective treatment of large or giant intracranial internal carotid artery aneurysms, demonstrated by high rates of completeAneurysm occlusion and low rates of adverse neurologic events; even in aneurYSms failing previous alternative treatments.
Abstract: The Pipeline for Uncoilable or Failed Aneurysms study demonstrated a high rate (78 of 108, 73.6%) of complete occlusion of large and giant wide-necked aneurysms of the internal carotid artery and a reasonably low rate of major safety events (6 of 107, 5.6% rate of major stroke or neurologic death).

728 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Jun 2013-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: This study presents a framework for assessing three dimensions of climate change vulnerability, namely sensitivity, exposure and adaptive capacity, and finds that high concentration areas for species with traits conferring highest sensitivity and lowest adaptive capacity differ from those of highly exposed species.
Abstract: Climate change will have far-reaching impacts on biodiversity, including increasing extinction rates. Current approaches to quantifying such impacts focus on measuring exposure to climatic change and largely ignore the biological differences between species that may significantly increase or reduce their vulnerability. To address this, we present a framework for assessing three dimensions of climate change vulnerability, namely sensitivity, exposure and adaptive capacity; this draws on species’ biological traits and their modeled exposure to projected climatic changes. In the largest such assessment to date, we applied this approach to each of the world’s birds, amphibians and corals (16,857 species). The resulting assessments identify the species with greatest relative vulnerability to climate change and the geographic areas in which they are concentrated, including the Amazon basin for amphibians and birds, and the central Indo-west Pacific (Coral Triangle) for corals. We found that high concentration areas for species with traits conferring highest sensitivity and lowest adaptive capacity differ from those of highly exposed species, and we identify areas where exposure-based assessments alone may over or under-estimate climate change impacts. We found that 608–851 bird (6–9%), 670–933 amphibian (11– 15%), and 47–73 coral species (6–9%) are both highly climate change vulnerable and already threatened with extinction on the IUCN Red List. The remaining highly climate change vulnerable species represent new priorities for conservation. Fewer species are highly climate change vulnerable under lower IPCC SRES emissions scenarios, indicating that reducing greenhouse emissions will reduce climate change driven extinctions. Our study answers the growing call for a more biologically and ecologically inclusive approach to assessing climate change vulnerability. By facilitating independent assessment of the three dimensions of climate change vulnerability, our approach can be used to devise species and areaspecific conservation interventions and indices. The priorities we identify will strengthen global strategies to mitigate climate change impacts.

722 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