Institution
University of Arizona
Education•Tucson, Arizona, United States•
About: University of Arizona is a education organization based out in Tucson, Arizona, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 63805 authors who have published 155998 publications receiving 6854915 citations. The organization is also known as: UA & U of A.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Stars, Redshift, Star formation
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present extensive forecasts for constraints on the dark energy equation of state and parameterized deviations from General Relativity, achievable with Stage III and Stage IV experimental programs that incorporate supernovae, BAO, weak lensing, and cosmic microwave background data.
1,253 citations
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Brown University1, Virginia Commonwealth University2, Stony Brook University3, Stanford University4, University of Washington5, University of Arizona6, Cornell University7, Emory University8, University of Texas Medical Branch9, University of Pittsburgh10, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center11, Rush University Medical Center12
TL;DR: Although about half of patients with chronic forms of major depression have a response to short-term treatment with either nefazodone or a cognitive behavioral-analysis system of psychotherapy, the combination of the two is significantly more efficacious than either treatment alone.
Abstract: Background Patients with chronic forms of major depression are difficult to treat, and the relative efficacy of medications and psychotherapy is uncertain. Methods We randomly assigned 681 adults with a chronic nonpsychotic major depressive disorder to 12 weeks of outpatient treatment with nefazodone (maximal dose, 600 mg per day), the cognitive behavioral-analysis system of psychotherapy (16 to 20 sessions), or both. At base line, all patients had scores of at least 20 on the 24-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (indicating clinically significant depression). Remission was defined as a score of 8 or less at weeks 10 and 12. For patients who did not have remission, a satisfactory response was defined as a reduction in the score by at least 50 percent from base line and a score of 15 or less. Raters were unaware of the patients' treatment assignments. Results Of the 681 patients, 662 attended at least one treatment session and were included in the analysis of response. The overall rate of response ...
1,251 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the covariant behavior of Lu-Hf and Sm-Nd isotopes during most magmatic processes has been recognized, but the details of this behavior in the depleted mantle reservoir have not been adequately examined.
1,250 citations
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TL;DR: The first six months of the Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey (CRTS) were reported in this paper, with over 350 unique optical transients rising more than 2 mag from past measurements.
Abstract: We report on the results from the first six months of the Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey (CRTS). In order to search for optical transients (OTs) with timescales of minutes to years, the CRTS analyses data from the Catalina Sky Survey which repeatedly covers 26,000 of square degrees on the sky. The CRTS provides a public stream of transients that are bright enough to be followed up using small telescopes. Since the beginning of the survey, all CRTS transients have been made available to astronomers around the world in real time using HTML tables,RSS feeds, and VOEvents. As part of our public outreach program, the detections are now also available in Keyhole Markup Language through Google Sky. The initial discoveries include over 350 unique OTs rising more than 2 mag from past measurements. Sixty two of these are classified as supernovae (SNe), based on light curves, prior deep imaging and spectroscopic data. Seventy seven are due to cataclysmic variables (CVs; only 13 previously known), while an additional 100 transients were too infrequently sampled to distinguish between faint CVs and SNe. The remaining OTs include active galactic nucleus, blazars, high-proper-motions stars, highly variable stars (such as UV Ceti stars), and transients of an unknown nature. Our results suggest that there is a large population of SNe missed by many current SN surveys because of selection biases. These objects appear to be associated with faint host galaxies. We also discuss the unexpected discovery of white dwarf binary systems through dramatic eclipses.
1,249 citations
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01 Jan 1977
TL;DR: It now appears possible to identify these circuits, localize the sites of memory storage, and analyze the cellular and molecular mechanisms of memory.
Abstract: How the brain codes, stores, and retrieves memories is among the most important and baffling questions in science. The uniqueness of each human being is due largely to the memory store—the biological residue of memory from a lifetime of experience. The cellular basis of this ability to learn can be traced to simpler organisms. In the past generation, understanding of the biological basis of learning and memory has undergone a revolution. It is clear that various forms and aspects of learning and memory involve particular systems, networks, and circuits in the brain, and it now appears possible to identify these circuits, localize the sites of memory storage, and analyze the cellular and molecular mechanisms of memory.
1,248 citations
Authors
Showing all 64388 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Simon D. M. White | 189 | 795 | 231645 |
Julie E. Buring | 186 | 950 | 132967 |
David H. Weinberg | 183 | 700 | 171424 |
Richard Peto | 183 | 683 | 231434 |
Xiaohui Fan | 183 | 878 | 168522 |
Dennis S. Charney | 179 | 802 | 122408 |
Daniel J. Eisenstein | 179 | 672 | 151720 |
David Haussler | 172 | 488 | 224960 |
Carlos S. Frenk | 165 | 799 | 140345 |
Jian-Kang Zhu | 161 | 550 | 105551 |
Tobin J. Marks | 159 | 1621 | 111604 |
Todd Adams | 154 | 1866 | 143110 |
Jane A. Cauley | 151 | 914 | 99933 |
Wei Zheng | 151 | 1929 | 120209 |
Daniel L. Schacter | 149 | 592 | 90148 |