Institution
University of Arkansas
Education•Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States•
About: University of Arkansas is a education organization based out in Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 17225 authors who have published 33329 publications receiving 941102 citations. The organization is also known as: Arkansas & UA.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Context (language use), Quantum dot, Broiler
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A review of the research conducted on intimacy within the area of social psychology and a summary of the empirical findings related to intimacy functioning in CSA survivors is suggested in this article, with a focus on the theoretical models that appear to have implications for the long-term interpersonal sequelae associated with CSA.
280 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that the majority of existing links are associated to weak trade relationships; the weighted WTW is only weakly disassortative; and countries holding more intense trade relationships are more clustered.
Abstract: This paper studies the topological properties of the World Trade Web (WTW) and its evolution over time by employing a weighted-network analysis. We show that the WTW, viewed as a weighted network, displays statistical features that are very different from those obtained by using a traditional binary-network approach. In particular, we find that: (i) the majority of existing links are associated to weak trade relationships; (ii) the weighted WTW is only weakly disassortative; (iii) countries holding more intense trade relationships are more clustered.
280 citations
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TL;DR: An evaluation of 361 patients with documented anterior cru ciate tears was carried out with analysis of mechanisms, symp tomatology, physical findings, and limitations.
Abstract: An evaluation of 361 patients with documented anterior cru ciate tears was carried out with analysis of mechanisms, symp tomatology, physical findings, and limitations. At the time of injury, patients generally heard a loud pop and felt their knee "slide apart" with a subsequent hemarthrosis. Internal tibial rotation was described as the principal mechanism of injury in 81.6% of the patients. Less than 20% had a triad type injury. A "crossover" test enabled reproduction of the mechanism. On a 100 point scale, those with "no repair" scored a mean of 55.4, direct repairs 56.7, pes transfers 59.6, and modified MacIntosh 88.9 points. The natural course of a patient can often be projected. A continuing comparative study of results from treatment regimens and procedures is indicated.
280 citations
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TL;DR: The improved method involved production of silica aquagel by adding silicate solution to pH 1.5 hydrochloric, citric, or oxalic acid solutions until the pH 4.0 was reached and silica xerogels produced by the improved method had sodium content of 0.52% and 0.22%, respectively.
280 citations
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TL;DR: There are genes or TFs containing both DRE/CRT and ABRE, which can integrate input stimuli from salinity, drought, cold and ABA signaling pathways, thereby enabling cross-tolerance to multiple stresses.
Abstract: Salinity, drought and low temperature are the common forms of abiotic stress encountered by land plants. To cope with these adverse environmental factors, plants execute several physiological and metabolic responses. Both osmotic stress (elicited by water deficit or high salt) and cold stress increase the endogenous level of the phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA). ABA-dependent stomatal closure to reduce water loss is associated with small signaling molecules like nitric oxide, reactive oxygen species and cytosolic free calcium, and mediated by rapidly altering ion fluxes in guard cells. ABA also triggers the expression of osmotic stress-responsive (OR) genes, which usually contain single/multiple copies of cis-acting sequence called abscisic acid-responsive element (ABRE) in their upstream regions, mostly recognized by the basic leucine zipper-transcription factors (TFs), namely, ABA-responsive element-binding protein/ABA-binding factor. Another conserved sequence called the dehydration-responsive element (DRE)/C-repeat, responding to cold or osmotic stress, but not to ABA, occurs in some OR promoters, to which the DRE-binding protein/C-repeat-binding factor binds. In contrast, there are genes or TFs containing both DRE/CRT and ABRE, which can integrate input stimuli from salinity, drought, cold and ABA signaling pathways, thereby enabling cross-tolerance to multiple stresses. A strong candidate that mediates such cross-talk is calcium, which serves as a common second messenger for abiotic stress conditions and ABA. The present review highlights the involvement of both ABA-dependent and ABA-independent signaling components and their interaction or convergence in activating the stress genes. We restrict our discussion to salinity, drought and cold stress.
279 citations
Authors
Showing all 17387 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Robert M. Califf | 196 | 1561 | 167961 |
Hugh A. Sampson | 147 | 816 | 76492 |
Stephen Boyd | 138 | 822 | 151205 |
Nikhil C. Munshi | 134 | 906 | 67349 |
Jian-Guo Bian | 128 | 1219 | 80964 |
Bart Barlogie | 126 | 779 | 57803 |
Robert R. Wolfe | 124 | 566 | 54000 |
Daniel B. Mark | 124 | 576 | 78385 |
E. Magnus Ohman | 124 | 622 | 68976 |
Benoît Roux | 120 | 493 | 62215 |
Robert C. Haddon | 112 | 577 | 52712 |
Rodney J. Bartlett | 109 | 700 | 56154 |
Baoshan Xing | 109 | 823 | 48944 |
Gareth J. Morgan | 109 | 1019 | 52957 |
Josep Dalmau | 108 | 568 | 49331 |