Institution
Tampere University of Technology
About: Tampere University of Technology is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Laser & Context (language use). The organization has 6802 authors who have published 19787 publications receiving 431793 citations. The organization is also known as: Tampereen teknillinen yliopisto.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
01 Jan 2013TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the third version of the OE-A Roadmap for organic and printed electronics, developed as a joint activity by key teams of experts in 9 applications and 3 technology areas.
Abstract: The roadmap for organic and printed electronics is a key activity of the OE-A, the industrial organisation for the young organic, printed and large area electronics industry. Organic electronics is a platform technology that enables multiple applications, which vary widely in their specifications. Since the technology is still in its early stage—and is in the transition from lab-scale and prototype activities to production—it is important to develop a common opinion about what kind of products, processes and materials will be available and when. This chapter is based on the third version of the OE-A Roadmap for organic and printed electronics, developed as a joint activity by key teams of experts in 9 applications and 3 technology areas, informed by further discussions with other OE-A members during association meetings. The resulting roadmap is a synthesis of these results representing common perspectives of the different OE-A forums. Through comparison of expected product needs in the application areas with the expected technology development paths, potential roadblocks or “red brick walls” such as resolution, registration and complementary circuitry are identified.
99 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, a circularly polarized shorted annular ring-slot rectenna (rectifying antenna) on a 0.5 mm thick flexible microwave laminate is proposed for the powering of portable devices operating without batteries.
Abstract: Portable devices operating without batteries are sometimes desired in wireless applications such as RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) and telemetry. A novel circularly polarized shorted annular ring-slot rectenna (rectifying antenna) on a 0.5 mm thick flexible microwave laminate is proposed for the powering of these devices. Output dc voltage of 1.3 V and axial ratio of 1.5 dB were measured when 32 dBm microwave power was transmitted at 5.8 GHz over a distance of 2 m. Comparing the results with a rectenna designed on a thick rigid laminate, similar performance was observed.
99 citations
••
TL;DR: This paper analyzes multi-hop molecular nanonetworks that utilize bacteria as a carrier and shows that numerous bacteria properties fit to properties required for communication networking (e.g., packet filtering, routing, addressing).
Abstract: Molecular communication is a new paradigm for nanomachines to exchange information, by utilizing biological mechanism and/or components to transfer information (e.g., molecular diffusion, neuronal networks, molecular motors). One possible approach for molecular communication is through the use of bacteria, which can act as carriers for DNA-based information, i.e., plasmids. This paper analyzes multi-hop molecular nanonetworks that utilize bacteria as a carrier. The proposed approach combines different properties of bacteria to enable multi-hop transmission, such as conjugation and chemotaxis-based motility. Various analyses have been performed, including the correlation between the success rate of plasmid delivery to the destination node, and the role of conjugation in enabling this; as well as analyses on the impact of large topology shapes (e.g., Grid, Random, and Scale-free) on the success rate of plasmid delivery for multiple source-destination nanonetworks. A further solution proposed in this paper is the application of antibiotics to act as filters on illegitimate messages that could be delivered by the bacteria. Our evaluation, which has been conducted through a series of simulations, has shown that numerous bacteria properties fit to properties required for communication networking (e.g., packet filtering, routing, addressing).
99 citations
••
26 Mar 2006TL;DR: The structural similarity index is used as a measure for perceptual similarity and a multiscale algorithm for obtaining a perceptual disparity map and a stereo-similarity map to be used in the suggested metric is designed.
Abstract: We suggest a compound full-reference stereo-video quality metric composed of two components: a monoscopic quality component and stereoscopic quality component. While the former assesses the trivial monoscopic perceived distortions caused by blur, noise, contrast change etc., the latter assesses the perceived degradation of binocular depth cues only. We use the structural similarity index as a measure for perceptual similarity and design a multiscale algorithm for obtaining a perceptual disparity map and a stereo-similarity map to be used in the suggested metric. We verify the performance of the metric with subjective tests on distorted stereo images and coded stereo-video sequences with a final aim to build a perceptually-aware feedback for a H.264 based stereo-video encoder
99 citations
••
TL;DR: It is suggested that osteogenic culture conditions amplify the stimulatory effect of vibration loading on differentiation of hASCs towards bone-forming cells and simultaneously inhibit differentiation towards fat tissue.
Abstract: Mechanical stimulation is an essential factor affecting the metabolism of bone cells and their precursors. We hypothesized that vibration loading would stimulate differentiation of human adipose stem cells (hASCs) towards bone-forming cells and simultaneously inhibit differentiation towards fat tissue. We developed a vibration-loading device that produces 3g peak acceleration at frequencies of 50 and 100 Hz to cells cultured on well plates. hASCs were cultured using either basal medium (BM), osteogenic medium (OM) or adipogenic medium (AM), and subjected to vibration loading for 3 h d(-1) for 1, 7 and 14 day. Osteogenesis, i.e. differentiation of hASCs towards bone-forming cells, was analysed using markers such as alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity, collagen production and mineralization. Both 50 and 100 Hz vibration frequencies induced significantly increased ALP activity and collagen production of hASCs compared with the static control at 14 day in OM. A similar trend was detected for mineralization, but the increase was not statistically significant. Furthermore, vibration loading inhibited adipocyte differentiation of hASCs. Vibration did not affect cell number or viability. These findings suggest that osteogenic culture conditions amplify the stimulatory effect of vibration loading on differentiation of hASCs towards bone-forming cells.
99 citations
Authors
Showing all 6802 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Terho Lehtimäki | 142 | 1304 | 106981 |
Prashant V. Kamat | 140 | 725 | 79259 |
Ian F. Akyildiz | 117 | 612 | 99653 |
Shunichi Fukuzumi | 111 | 1256 | 52764 |
Tetsuo Nagano | 96 | 490 | 34267 |
Andreas Hirsch | 90 | 778 | 36173 |
Ralf Metzler | 86 | 511 | 34793 |
Teuvo L.J. Tammela | 84 | 630 | 32847 |
Hiroshi Imahori | 79 | 472 | 24047 |
Yasuteru Urano | 79 | 356 | 24884 |
Jiri Matas | 78 | 345 | 44739 |
Piet N.L. Lens | 77 | 633 | 23367 |
Nail Akhmediev | 76 | 469 | 24205 |
Luis Echegoyen | 74 | 576 | 20094 |
Ilpo Vattulainen | 73 | 325 | 16445 |