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Institution

Université de Montréal

EducationMontreal, Quebec, Canada
About: Université de Montréal is a education organization based out in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 45641 authors who have published 100476 publications receiving 4004007 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Montreal & UdeM.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reexamine the findings of Perron (1989) regarding the claim that most macroeconomic time series are best construed as stationary fluctuations around a deterministic trend function if allowance is made for the possibility of a shift in the intercept of the trend function in 1929 (a crash) and a shifting in slope in 1973 (a slowdown in growth).

1,860 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Understanding how these different cell populations interact to regulate the barrier properties is essential for understanding how the brain functions during health and disease.
Abstract: Blood vessels are critical to deliver oxygen and nutrients to all of the tissues and organs throughout the body. The blood vessels that vascularize the central nervous system (CNS) possess unique properties, termed the blood-brain barrier, which allow these vessels to tightly regulate the movement of ions, molecules, and cells between the blood and the brain. This precise control of CNS homeostasis allows for proper neuronal function and also protects the neural tissue from toxins and pathogens, and alterations of these barrier properties are an important component of pathology and progression of different neurological diseases. The physiological barrier is coordinated by a series of physical, transport, and metabolic properties possessed by the endothelial cells (ECs) that form the walls of the blood vessels, and these properties are regulated by interactions with different vascular, immune, and neural cells. Understanding how these different cell populations interact to regulate the barrier properties is essential for understanding how the brain functions during health and disease.

1,839 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Nov 2003-BMJ
TL;DR: The aim was to develop a common understanding of the concept of continuity as a basis for valid and reliable measurement of practice in different settings.
Abstract: The concept—and reality—of continuity of care crosses disciplinary and organisational boundaries. The common definitions provided here should help healthcare providers evaluate continuity more rigorously and improve communication Patients are increasingly seen by an array of providers in a wide variety of organisations and places, raising concerns about fragmentation of care. Policy reports and charters worldwide urge a concerted effort to enhance continuity,1–3 but efforts to describe the problem or formulate solutions are complicated by the lack of consensus on the definition of continuity. To add to the confusion, other terms such as continuum of care, coordination of care, discharge planning, case management, integration of services, and seamless care are often used synonymously. This synthesis was commissioned by three Canadian health services policy and research bodies. The aim was to develop a common understanding of the concept of continuity as a basis for valid and reliable measurement of practice in different settings. We searched academic and policy literature for documents in which the principal focus was continuity of patient care or continuity. We searched electronic databases (Medline, HealthSTAR, Embase, CINAHL, Current Contents, PsychINFO, AIDSLINE, CancerLit, Cochrane Library, Dissertation abstracts, Papers1st (conferences and paper abstracts), Web of Science, WorldCat) as well as web library catalogues, peer reviewed internet sites, internet search engines, and several in-house databases. The search included documents dated from 1966 to November 2001 written in English, French, or Spanish. The reviewers (RJR, JLH, RMcK) used a data abstraction form to summarise relevant documents from every health discipline, and all reviewers read key documents. We presented the results of an initial review of 314 documents to participants of a workshop on continuity held in Vancouver in June 2001. We obtained structured feedback to a discussion paper, problem based scenarios, and expert presentations. Participants validated the common themes …

1,836 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The OARSI cartilage OA histopathology grading system appears consistent and simple to apply as discussed by the authors, however, further studies are required to confirm the system's utility, as well as their reproducibility and validity.

1,813 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Pardis C. Sabeti1, Pardis C. Sabeti2, Patrick Varilly2, Patrick Varilly1  +255 moreInstitutions (50)
18 Oct 2007-Nature
TL;DR: ‘Long-range haplotype’ methods, which were developed to identify alleles segregating in a population that have undergone recent selection, and new methods that are based on cross-population comparisons to discover alleles that have swept to near-fixation within a population are developed.
Abstract: With the advent of dense maps of human genetic variation, it is now possible to detect positive natural selection across the human genome. Here we report an analysis of over 3 million polymorphisms from the International HapMap Project Phase 2 (HapMap2). We used 'long-range haplotype' methods, which were developed to identify alleles segregating in a population that have undergone recent selection, and we also developed new methods that are based on cross-population comparisons to discover alleles that have swept to near-fixation within a population. The analysis reveals more than 300 strong candidate regions. Focusing on the strongest 22 regions, we develop a heuristic for scrutinizing these regions to identify candidate targets of selection. In a complementary analysis, we identify 26 non-synonymous, coding, single nucleotide polymorphisms showing regional evidence of positive selection. Examination of these candidates highlights three cases in which two genes in a common biological process have apparently undergone positive selection in the same population:LARGE and DMD, both related to infection by the Lassa virus, in West Africa;SLC24A5 and SLC45A2, both involved in skin pigmentation, in Europe; and EDAR and EDA2R, both involved in development of hair follicles, in Asia.

1,778 citations


Authors

Showing all 45957 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yoshua Bengio2021033420313
Alan C. Evans183866134642
Richard H. Friend1691182140032
Anders Björklund16576984268
Charles N. Serhan15872884810
Fernando Rivadeneira14662886582
C. Dallapiccola1361717101947
Michael J. Meaney13660481128
Claude Leroy135117088604
Georges Azuelos134129490690
Phillip Gutierrez133139196205
Danny Miller13351271238
Henry T. Lynch13392586270
Stanley Nattel13277865700
Lucie Gauthier13267964794
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023118
2022485
20216,077
20205,753
20195,212
20184,696