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Institution

University of Antwerp

EducationAntwerp, Belgium
About: University of Antwerp is a education organization based out in Antwerp, Belgium. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 16682 authors who have published 48837 publications receiving 1689748 citations. The organization is also known as: Universiteit Antwerpen & UAntwerp.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a meta-analysis reveals a positive effect of cooperative learning on achievement and attitudes in primary, secondary or tertiary education conducted in real-life classrooms, and the authors investigate the effect of the study domain, the age level of the students and the culture in which the study took place.

313 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel, profit centric performance measure is developed, by calculating the maximum profit that can be generated by including the optimal fraction of customers with the highest predicted probabilities to attrite in a retention campaign.

313 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
A. Aktas, Calin Alexa, V. P. Andreev, T. Anthonis1  +283 moreInstitutions (35)
TL;DR: In this article, a new set of diffractive parton distribution functions is obtained through a simultaneous fit to the diffractive inclusive and dijet cross sections, which allows for a precise determination of both diffractive quark and gluon distributions in the range 0.05 < zIP < 0.9.
Abstract: Differential dijet cross sections in diffractive deep-inelastic scattering are measured with the H1 detector at HERA using an integrated luminosity of 51.5 pb−1. The selected events are of the type ep → eXY , where the system X contains at least two jets and is well separated in rapidity from the low mass proton dissociation system Y . The dijet data are compared with QCD predictions at next-to-leading order based on diffractive parton distribution functions previously extracted from measurements of inclusive diffractive deepinelastic scattering. The prediction describes the dijet data well at low and intermediate zIP (the fraction of the momentum of the diffractive exchange carried by the parton entering the hard interaction) where the gluon density is well determined from the inclusive diffractive data, supporting QCD factorisation. A new set of diffractive parton distribution functions is obtained through a simultaneous fit to the diffractive inclusive and dijet cross sections. This allows for a precise determination of both the diffractive quark and gluon distributions in the range 0.05 < zIP < 0.9. In particular, the precision on the gluon density at high momentum fractions is improved compared to previous extractions.

312 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The main findings were that frequent vacuum cleaning resulted in lower FR concentrations in dust and that dermal contact with dust was as important for the intake of organophosphate FRs as dust ingestion.
Abstract: This study investigates the occurrence of 37 organohalogen and organophosphate flame retardants (FRs) from Norwegian households (n = 48) and classrooms from two primary schools (n = 6). Around 80% of the targeted FRs were detected in air and dust from the sampling sites. The comparison of settled dust with floor dust revealed no statistical differences between median concentrations of the FRs (n = 12). Decabromodiphenyl ether and tris(2-butoxyethyl) phosphate showed the highest median floor dust concentrations in both environments. In the air samples, the highest concentrations were observed for 2,2',4,4'-tetrabromodiphenyl ether and tris(1-chloro-2-propyl) phosphate. Remarkably, the emerging FR, 4-(1,2-dibromoethyl)-1,2-dibromocyclohexane, abbreviated as TBECH or DBE-DBCH, showed the highest indoor air concentrations reported in the literature (households, 77.9 pg/m(3) and schools, 46.6 pg/m(3)). Good Spearman correlations between the FR concentrations in dust and air (0.36 < R < 0.76) showed that is possible to estimate the concentrations in air from analyzed dust, or vice versa. Sources and pathways of exposure to FRs were assessed for the households. The main findings were that frequent vacuum cleaning resulted in lower FR concentrations in dust and that dermal contact with dust, for both children and mothers, was as important for the intake of organophosphate FRs as dust ingestion.

312 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that compensating for the loss of natural cytokinins in droughted plants interferes with the suppression of shoot growth and the enhancement of root elongation normally seen in d droughtted plants.
Abstract: Cytokinins can promote stomatal opening, stimulate shoot growth and decrease root growth. When soil is drying, natural cytokinin concentrations decrease in association with stomatal closure and a redirection of growth away from the shoots to the roots. We asked if decreased cytokinin concentrations mediate these adaptive responses by lessening water loss and promoting root growth thereby favouring exploration for soil water. Our approach was to follow the consequences for 12-d-old lettuce seedlings of inoculating the growing medium with cytokinin-producing bacteria under conditions of water sufficiency and deficit. Inoculation increased shoot cytokinins as assessed by immunoassay and mass spectrometry. Inoculation also promoted the accumulation of shoot mass and shortened roots while having a smaller effect on root mass. Inoculation did not raise stomatal conductance. The possible promoting effect of these cytokinins on stomatal conductance was seemingly hampered by increases in shoot ABA that inoculation also induced. Inoculation lowered root/shoot ratios by stimulating shoot growth. The effect was greater in non-droughted plants but remained sufficiently strong for shoot mass of inoculated droughted plants to exceed that of well-watered non-inoculated plants. We conclude that compensating for the loss of natural cytokinins in droughted plants interferes with the suppression of shoot growth and the enhancement of root elongation normally seen in droughted plants.

312 citations


Authors

Showing all 16957 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Cornelia M. van Duijn1831030146009
John Hardy1771178171694
Mark Gerstein168751149578
Hannes Jung1592069125069
Rui Zhang1512625107917
Dirk Inzé14964774468
Walter Paulus14980986252
Robin Erbacher1381721100252
Rupert Leitner136120190597
Alison Goate13672185846
Andrea Giammanco135136298093
Maria Spiropulu135145596674
Peter Robmann135143897569
Michael Tytgat134144994133
Matthew Herndon133173297466
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023137
2022460
20213,656
20203,332
20192,982
20182,844