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Institution

University at Buffalo

EducationBuffalo, New York, United States
About: University at Buffalo is a education organization based out in Buffalo, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 33773 authors who have published 63840 publications receiving 2278954 citations. The organization is also known as: UB & State University of New York at Buffalo.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This survey focuses on providing a comprehensive overview of truth discovery methods, and summarizing them from different aspects, and offers some guidelines on how to apply these approaches in application domains.
Abstract: Thanks to information explosion, data for the objects of interest can be collected from increasingly more sources. However, for the same object, there usually exist conflicts among the collected multi-source information. To tackle this challenge, truth discovery, which integrates multi-source noisy information by estimating the reliability of each source, has emerged as a hot topic. Several truth discovery methods have been proposed for various scenarios, and they have been successfully applied in diverse application domains. In this survey, we focus on providing a comprehensive overview of truth discovery methods, and summarizing them from different aspects. We also discuss some future directions of truth discovery research. We hope that this survey will promote a better understanding of the current progress on truth discovery, and offer some guidelines on how to apply these approaches in application domains.

331 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The review of published literature identified 13 studies, most conducted on existing databases by using diagnostic and medical procedure codes and focused on health care costs, which estimated annual COI of ADHD in children and adolescents at $14,576 per individual (2005 dollars).
Abstract: Using a cost of illness (COI) framework, this article examines the economic impact of attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in childhood and adolescence. Our review of published literature identified 13 studies, most conducted on existing databases by using diagnostic and medical procedure codes and focused on health care costs. Two were longitudinal studies of identified children with ADHD followed into adolescence. Costs were examined for ADHD treatment-related and other health care costs (all but 1 study addressed some aspect of health care), education (special education, 2 studies; disciplinary costs: 1 study), parental work loss (2 studies), and juvenile justice (2 studies). Based on this small and as yet incomplete evidence base, we estimated annual COI of ADHD in children and adolescents at $14,576 per individual (2005 dollars). Given the variability of estimates across studies on which that number is based, a reasonable range is between $12,005 and $17,458 per individual. Using a prevalence rate of 5%, a conservative estimate of the annual societal COI for ADHD in childhood and adolescence is $42.5 billion, with a range between $36 billion and $52.4 billion. Estimates are preliminary because the literature is incomplete; many potential costs have not been assessed in extant studies. Limitations of the review and suggestions for future research on COI of ADHD are provided.

331 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In biological apatite, DCPD and OCP are usually detected only during pathological calcification where the pH is often relatively low, suggesting the involvement of other precursors or the formation of an initial amorphous calcium phosphate phase (ACP) followed by transformation to apatites.
Abstract: Studies of apatite mineral formation are complicated by the possibility of forming several calcium phosphate phases. The least soluble, hydroxyapatite (HAP), is preferentially formed under neutral or basic conditions. In more acidic solutions phases such as dicalcium phosphate dihydrate (Brushite, DCPD) and octacalcium phosphate (OCP) are often found. Even under ideal HAP precipitation conditions the precipitates are generally nonstoichiometric, suggesting the formation of calcium-deficient apatites. Both DCPD and OCP have been implicated as possible precursors to the formation of apatite. This may occur by the initial precipitation of DCPD and/or OCP followed by transformation to a more apatitic phase. Although DCPD and OCP are often detected during in vitro crystallization, in vivo studies of bone formation rarely show the presence of these acidic calcium phosphate phases. In the latter case the situation is more complicated, since a large number of ions and molecules are present that can be incorporated into the crystal lattice or adsorbed at the crystallite surfaces. In biological apatite, DCPD and OCP are usually detected only during pathological calcification where the pH is often relatively low. In normal in vivo calcifications these phases have not been found, suggesting the involvement of other precursors or the formation of an initial amorphous calcium phosphate phase (ACP) followed by transformation to apatite.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The recently described tricine-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (TSDS-PAGE) system was utilized to study the lipooligosaccharides and lipopolysaccharides of gram negative bacteria to allow more rapid and accurate analysis of LOS and the core region of LPS.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Blockchain technology capabilities for contributing to social and environmental sustainability, research gaps, adversary effects of Blockchain, and future research directions are discussed.
Abstract: The objective of this study is to provide an overview of Blockchain technology and Industry 4.0 for advancing supply chains towards sustainability. First, extracted from the existing literature, we evaluate the capabilities of Industry 4.0 for sustainability under three main topics of (1) Internet of things (IoT)-enabled energy management in smart factories; (2) smart logistics and transportation; and (3) smart business models. We expand beyond Industry 4.0 with unfolding the capabilities that Blockchain offers for increasing sustainability, under four main areas: (1) design of incentive mechanisms and tokenization to promote consumer green behavior; (2) enhance visibility across the entire product lifecycle; (3) increase systems efficiency while decreasing development and operational costs; and (4) foster sustainability monitoring and reporting performance across supply chain networks. Furthermore, Blockchain technology capabilities for contributing to social and environmental sustainability, research gaps, adversary effects of Blockchain, and future research directions are discussed.

330 citations


Authors

Showing all 34002 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Rakesh K. Jain2001467177727
Julie E. Buring186950132967
Anil K. Jain1831016192151
Donald G. Truhlar1651518157965
Roger A. Nicoll16539784121
Bruce L. Miller1631153115975
David R. Holmes1611624114187
Suvadeep Bose154960129071
Ashok Kumar1515654164086
Philip S. Yu1481914107374
Hugh A. Sampson14781676492
Aaron Dominguez1471968113224
Gregory R Snow1471704115677
J. S. Keller14498198249
C. Ronald Kahn14452579809
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202388
2022363
20212,772
20202,695
20192,527
20182,500