Institution
Universidad del Norte, Colombia
Education•Barranquilla, Colombia•
About: Universidad del Norte, Colombia is a education organization based out in Barranquilla, Colombia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 3562 authors who have published 4355 publications receiving 37861 citations. The organization is also known as: University of the North, Colombia & Uninorte.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The findings show no drastic changes or developments in the field of OR/MS in DOM since the publication of Altay and Green (2006), and provides future research directions in order to make improvements in the areas where lack of research is detected.
526 citations
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08 Oct 2016
TL;DR: Deep Action Proposals (DAPs), an effective and efficient algorithm for generating temporal action proposals from long videos, is introduced, which outperforms previous work on a large scale action benchmark, runs at 134 FPS making it practical for large-scale scenarios, and exhibits an appealing ability to generalize.
Abstract: Object proposals have contributed significantly to recent advances in object understanding in images. Inspired by the success of this approach, we introduce Deep Action Proposals (DAPs), an effective and efficient algorithm for generating temporal action proposals from long videos. We show how to take advantage of the vast capacity of deep learning models and memory cells to retrieve from untrimmed videos temporal segments, which are likely to contain actions. A comprehensive evaluation indicates that our approach outperforms previous work on a large scale action benchmark, runs at 134 FPS making it practical for large-scale scenarios, and exhibits an appealing ability to generalize, i.e. to retrieve good quality temporal proposals of actions unseen in training.
432 citations
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TL;DR: A state-of-the-art survey on the vehicle routing problem with multiple depots (MDVRP) is presented, considered papers published between 1988 and 2014, in which several variants of the model are studied.
373 citations
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University of Basel1, Griffith University2, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna3, Kangwon National University4, Peking University5, Beijing Normal University6, India Meteorological Department7, Tarbiat Modares University8, Moscow State University9, Ankara University10, University of Costa Rica11, Universidad del Norte, Colombia12, Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul13, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile14, École Normale Supérieure15, University of Fort Hare16, Université catholique de Louvain17, Agricultural Research Service18
TL;DR: The first ever Global Rainfall Erosivity Database was used to develop a global erosivity map at 30 arc-seconds based on a Gaussian Process Regression(GPR), where the tropical climate zone has the highest mean rainfall erosivities followed by the temperate whereas the lowest mean was estimated in the cold climate zone.
Abstract: The exposure of the Earth’s surface to the energetic input of rainfall is one of the key factors controlling water erosion. While water erosion is identified as the most serious cause of soil degradation globally, global patterns of rainfall erosivity remain poorly quantified and estimates have large uncertainties. This hampers the implementation of effective soil degradation mitigation and restoration strategies. Quantifying rainfall erosivity is challenging as it requires high temporal resolution(<30 min) and high fidelity rainfall recordings. We present the results of an extensive global data collection effort whereby we estimated rainfall erosivity for 3,625 stations covering 63 countries. This first ever Global Rainfall Erosivity Database was used to develop a global erosivity map at 30 arc-seconds(~1 km) based on a Gaussian Process Regression(GPR). Globally, the mean rainfall erosivity was estimated to be 2,190 MJ mm ha−1 h−1 yr−1, with the highest values in South America and the Caribbean countries, Central east Africa and South east Asia. The lowest values are mainly found in Canada, the Russian Federation, Northern Europe, Northern Africa and the Middle East. The tropical climate zone has the highest mean rainfall erosivity followed by the temperate whereas the lowest mean was estimated in the cold climate zone.
344 citations
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TL;DR: KV3Sb5 shows enhanced skew scattering that scales quadratically, not linearly, with the longitudinal conductivity, possibly arising from the combination of highly conductive Dirac quasiparticles with a frustrated magnetic sublattice, which allows the possibility of reaching an anomalous Hall angle of 90° in metals.
Abstract: The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) is one of the most fundamental phenomena in physics. In the highly conductive regime, ferromagnetic metals have been the focus of past research. Here, we report a giant extrinsic AHE in KV3Sb5, an exfoliable, highly conductive semimetal with Dirac quasiparticles and a vanadium Kagome net. Even without report of long range magnetic order, the anomalous Hall conductivity reaches 15,507 Ω-1 cm-1 with an anomalous Hall ratio of ≈ 1.8%; an order of magnitude larger than Fe. Defying theoretical expectations, KV3Sb5 shows enhanced skew scattering that scales quadratically, not linearly, with the longitudinal conductivity, possibly arising from the combination of highly conductive Dirac quasiparticles with a frustrated magnetic sublattice. This allows the possibility of reaching an anomalous Hall angle of 90° in metals. This observation raises fundamental questions about AHEs and opens new frontiers for AHE and spin Hall effect exploration, particularly in metallic frustrated magnets.
326 citations
Authors
Showing all 3594 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Sid E. O'Bryant | 41 | 168 | 8123 |
Francisco Rothhammer | 39 | 191 | 8247 |
Juan Carlos Niebles | 37 | 70 | 9751 |
Miguel A. Labrador | 36 | 193 | 5951 |
Alcides Chaux | 35 | 121 | 4795 |
Calogero M. Santoro | 30 | 157 | 3041 |
Toby Miller | 30 | 378 | 4694 |
Diego Viasus | 29 | 75 | 2069 |
Carlos Lizama | 28 | 183 | 2617 |
Robert Pitt | 28 | 234 | 4015 |
Camilo Montes | 28 | 74 | 2878 |
James Hall | 27 | 114 | 2785 |
Luis A. Cisternas | 26 | 154 | 2012 |
Antonio Rodríguez Andrés | 26 | 91 | 2151 |
Ana C. Fonseca | 26 | 120 | 2608 |