Institution
Tallinn University of Technology
Education•Tallinn, Estonia•
About: Tallinn University of Technology is a education organization based out in Tallinn, Estonia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: European union & Oil shale. The organization has 3688 authors who have published 10313 publications receiving 145058 citations. The organization is also known as: Tallinn Technical University & Tallinna Tehnikaülikool.
Topics: European union, Oil shale, Thin film, Nonlinear system, Microstructure
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A quantitative annual mean temperature reconstruction from an annually laminated lake-sediment sequence in Estonia, eastern Europe, shows a distinct cold period at 8400-8080 yr B.P. as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: A quantitative annual mean temperature reconstruction from an annually laminated lake-sediment sequence in Estonia, eastern Europe, shows a distinct cold period at 8400– 8080 yr B.P. (= before A.D. 2000); the timing is consistent with that seen in the Greenland ice-core data and various high-resolution records from western Europe. During maximal cooling at 8250–8150 yr B.P., the annual mean temperature in Estonia was ∼2.0 °C colder than prior to and ∼3.0 °C colder than after the cooling. The pollen-stratigraphic and sedimentological data suggest especially cold and snowy winter conditions. The duration and amplitude of the cold event agree with the modeled impact of a sudden freshening of the North Atlantic surface water and subsequent perturbation of the thermohaline circulation. Provided that the cold event was caused by a pulse of freshwater—from the melting Laurentide Ice Sheet—to the North Atlantic, the results indicate a strong teleconnection between the North Atlantic oceanic forcing and the east European climate at least up to long 26°E, mediated probably by the changing intensity of the zonal atmospheric circulation.
148 citations
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TL;DR: Spatial structure in soil AMF communities may be related to the heterogeneous vegetation of the natural forest study system, while the temporal stability of communities suggests that AMF in soil represent a fairly constant local species pool from which mycorrhizae form and disband during the season.
Abstract: Despite the important ecosystem role played by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), little is known about spatial and temporal variation in soil AMF communities. We used pyrosequencing to characterise AMF communities in soil samples (n = 44) from a natural forest ecosystem. Fungal taxa were identified by BLAST matching of reads against the MaarjAM database of AMF SSU rRNA gene diversity. Sub-sampling within our dataset and experimental shortening of a set of long reads indicated that our approaches to taxonomic identification and diversity analysis were robust to variations in pyrosequencing read length and numbers of reads per sample. Different forest plots (each 10×10 m and separated from one another by 30 m) contained significantly different soil AMF communities, and the pairwise similarity of communities decreased with distance up to 50 m. However, there were no significant changes in community composition between different time points in the growing season (May-September). Spatial structure in soil AMF communities may be related to the heterogeneous vegetation of the natural forest study system, while the temporal stability of communities suggests that AMF in soil represent a fairly constant local species pool from which mycorrhizae form and disband during the season.
147 citations
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TL;DR: A model in which AFD1/REC8 controls homologous pairing through its role in axial element elongation and the subsequent distribution of the recombination machinery independent of bouquet formation is provided.
Abstract: REC8 is a master regulator of chromatin structure and function during meiosis. Here, we dissected the functions of absence of first division ( afd1 ), a maize rec8/ α -kleisin homolog, using a unique afd1 allelic series. The first observable defect in afd1 mutants is the inability to make a leptotene chromosome. AFD1 protein is required for elongation of axial elements but not for their initial recruitment, thus showing that AFD1 acts downstream of ASY1/HOP1. AFD1 is associated with the axial and later the lateral elements of the synaptonemal complex. Rescuing 50% of axial element elongation in the weakest afd1 allele restored bouquet formation demonstrating that extent of telomere clustering depends on axial element elongation. However, rescuing bouquet formation was not sufficient for either proper RAD51 distribution or homologous pairing. It provides the basis for a model in which AFD1/REC8 controls homologous pairing through its role in axial element elongation and the subsequent distribution of the recombination machinery independent of bouquet formation.
147 citations
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TL;DR: The preliminary study confirms that single-channel EEG analysis, employing the combination of measures, can provide discrimination of depression at the level of multichannel EEG analysis and shows that there is no single superior measure for detection of depression.
145 citations
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TL;DR: Different populations of neurons show a differential dependence on the expression of the two isoforms: KCC2a expression in the absence of K CC2b is presumably sufficient to support vital neuronal functions in the brain stem and spinal cord but not in the cortex.
145 citations
Authors
Showing all 3757 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
James Chapman | 82 | 483 | 36468 |
Alexandre Alexakis | 67 | 540 | 17247 |
Bernard Waeber | 56 | 370 | 35335 |
Peter A. Andrekson | 54 | 573 | 12042 |
Charles S. Peirce | 51 | 167 | 11998 |
Lars M. Blank | 49 | 301 | 8011 |
Fushuan Wen | 49 | 465 | 9189 |
Mati Karelson | 48 | 207 | 10210 |
Ago Samoson | 46 | 119 | 8807 |
Zebo Peng | 45 | 359 | 7312 |
Petru Eles | 44 | 300 | 6749 |
Vijai Kumar Gupta | 43 | 301 | 6901 |
Eero Vasar | 43 | 263 | 6930 |
Rik Ossenkoppele | 42 | 192 | 6839 |
Tõnis Timmusk | 41 | 105 | 11056 |