Institution
Université de Sherbrooke
Education•Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada•
About: Université de Sherbrooke is a education organization based out in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Receptor. The organization has 14922 authors who have published 28783 publications receiving 792511 citations. The organization is also known as: Universite de Sherbrooke & Sherbrooke University.
Topics: Population, Receptor, Health care, Angiotensin II, Poison control
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This work aims to provide an overview of education, tasks and remuneration of nurses and other primary care team members in six OECD countries using a framework of team organization across the care continuum to inspire policy makers and researchers to work on efficient and effective teams care models worldwide.
252 citations
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TL;DR: The mechanism and kinetics of the hydrogen evolution reaction were studied in on nickel-zinc alloy electrodes prepared by electrodeposition at controlled potential as discussed by the authors, and it was found that the reaction proceeds via the Volmer-Heyrovsky mechanism.
Abstract: The mechanism and kinetics of the hydrogen evolution reaction were studied in on nickel‐zinc alloy electrodes prepared by electrodeposition at controlled potential A series of electrodes containing 70 to 28% Ni was prepared Before the measurements, zinc was leached in alkaline solution Using the ac impedance technique, it was found that the reaction proceeds via the Volmer‐Heyrovsky mechanism, and the kinetic parameters of the process were determined With a decrease in the nickel content, the electrode becomes more active, and an increase in the real surface area is observed The surface morphology was studied using SEM and optical microscopy
251 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the Sherbrooke APD-PET scanner has been evaluated in terms of resolution, sensitivity, count rate, random and scatter fractions, contrast and relative activity recovery as a function of object size.
Abstract: The design features and engineering constraints of a PET system based on avalanche photodiode (APD) detectors have been described in a previous report. Here, the authors present the initial results obtained with the Sherbrooke APD-PET scanner, a very high spatial resolution device designed for dynamic imaging of small and medium-sized laboratory animals such as rats, cats, rabbits and small monkeys. Its physical performance has been evaluated in terms of resolution, sensitivity, count rate, random and scatter fractions, contrast and relative activity recovery as a function of object size. The capabilities of the scanner for biomedical research applications have been demonstrated using phantom and animal studies.
251 citations
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TL;DR: This paper investigates energy efficiency improvement for a downlink NOMA single-cell network by considering imperfect CSI, and proposes an iterative algorithm for user scheduling and power allocation to maximize the system energy efficiency.
Abstract: Non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) exploits successive interference cancellation technique at the receivers to improve the spectral efficiency. By using this technique, multiple users can be multiplexed on the same subchannel to achieve high sum rate. Most previous research works on NOMA systems assume perfect channel state information (CSI). However, in this paper, we investigate energy efficiency improvement for a downlink NOMA single-cell network by considering imperfect CSI. The energy efficient resource scheduling problem is formulated as a non-convex optimization problem with the constraints of outage probability limit, the maximum power of the system, the minimum user data rate, and the maximum number of multiplexed users sharing the same subchannel. Different from previous works, the maximum number of multiplexed users can be greater than two, and the imperfect CSI is first studied for resource allocation in NOMA. To efficiently solve this problem, the probabilistic mixed problem is first transformed into a non-probabilistic problem. An iterative algorithm for user scheduling and power allocation is proposed to maximize the system energy efficiency. The optimal user scheduling based on exhaustive search serves as a system performance benchmark, but it has high computational complexity. To balance the system performance and the computational complexity, a new suboptimal user scheduling scheme is proposed to schedule users on different subchannels. Based on the user scheduling scheme, the optimal power allocation expression is derived by the Lagrange approach. By transforming the fractional-form problem into an equivalent subtractive-form optimization problem, an iterative power allocation algorithm is proposed to maximize the system energy efficiency. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed user scheduling algorithm closely attains the optimal performance.
250 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that mountain goats are constrained to give birth in a short birth season synchronised with forage productivity, and a positive effect of mass on survival to 1 year when the sexes were pooled.
Abstract: In temperate environments, early-born ungulates may enjoy a longer growth period before winter, and so attain a higher body mass and an increased probability of survival compared to late-born ones. We assessed the effects of maternal characteristics, forage quality and population density on kid birthdate, mass and survival in a population of marked mountain goats (Oreamnos americanus) in Alberta. The duration and timing of the birth season were similar in all years. Births were highly synchronised: 80% of kids were born within 2 weeks of the first birth. Maternal age, maternal social rank and density did not affect kid birthdate or mass. Previous breeding experience was not related to kid birthdate, but kids born to pluriparous mothers were heavier during summer than kids born to primiparous mothers. Male and female kids had similar mass and accumulated mass linearly during summer. Early-born kids were heavier than late-born kids. Faecal crude protein (FCP) in late spring and maternal mass were positively related to kid mass. Survival to weaning appeared higher for males (90%) than for females (78%), but survival to 1 year was 65% for both sexes. FCP in late spring, density, birthdate and mass did not affect kid survival to weaning in either sex. Survival to 1 year increased with FCP in late spring for females, but not for males. Survival to 1 year was independent of birthdate for both sexes, but heavy females survived better than light ones. Multiple logistic regression revealed a positive effect of mass on survival to 1 year when the sexes were pooled. Our results suggest that mountain goats are constrained to give birth in a short birth season synchronised with forage productivity.
250 citations
Authors
Showing all 15051 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Masashi Yanagisawa | 130 | 524 | 83631 |
Joseph V. Bonventre | 126 | 596 | 61009 |
Jeffrey L. Benovic | 99 | 264 | 30041 |
Alessio Fasano | 96 | 478 | 34580 |
Graham Pawelec | 89 | 572 | 27373 |
Simon C. Robson | 88 | 552 | 29808 |
Paul B. Corkum | 88 | 576 | 37200 |
Mario Leclerc | 88 | 374 | 35961 |
Stephen M. Collins | 86 | 320 | 25646 |
Ed Harlow | 86 | 190 | 61008 |
William D. Fraser | 85 | 827 | 30155 |
Jean Cadet | 83 | 372 | 24000 |
Vincent Giguère | 82 | 227 | 27481 |
Robert Gurny | 81 | 396 | 28391 |
Jean-Michel Gaillard | 81 | 410 | 26780 |