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Institution

University of Cagliari

EducationCagliari, Italy
About: University of Cagliari is a education organization based out in Cagliari, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Dopamine. The organization has 11029 authors who have published 29046 publications receiving 771023 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli Studi di Cagliari & Universita degli Studi di Cagliari.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new approach is presented in order to improve the thermal stability of polymer: [6-6]-phenyl C61 butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) bulk heterojunction solar cells.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effective reggeized gluon (R)particle (P) vertices of the quasi-multi-regge kinematics (QMRK) were obtained, and explicit expressions satisfying Bose-symmetry and gauge invariance conditions were obtained.

170 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: A SVM whose rejection region is determined during the training phase, that is, a SVM with embedded reject option is proposed, which shows the advantages of the proposed SVM in terms of the achievable error-reject trade-off.
Abstract: In this paper, the problem of implementing the reject option in support vector machines (SVMs) is addressed. We started by observing that methods proposed so far simply apply a reject threshold to the outputs of a trained SVM. We then showed that, under the framework of the structural risk minimisation principle, the rejection region must be determined during the training phase of a classifier. By applying this concept, and by following Vapnik's approach, we developed a maximum margin classifier with reject option. This led us to a SVM whose rejection region is determined during the training phase, that is, a SVM with embedded reject option. To implement such a SVM, we devised a novel formulation of the SVM training problem and developed a specific algorithm to solve it. Preliminary results on a character recognition problem show the advantages of the proposed SVM in terms of the achievable error-reject trade-off.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work investigates the antibacterial, haemolytic and cytotoxic activities of temporin L (FVQWFSKFLGRIL-NH2), isolated from the skin of the European red frog Rana temporaria, which displayed the highest activity of temporins studied to date, against both human erythrocytes and bacterial and fungal strains.
Abstract: The temporins are a family of small, linear antibiotic peptides with intriguing biological properties. We investigated the antibacterial, haemolytic and cytotoxic activities of temporin L (FVQWFSKFLGRIL-NH2), isolated from the skin of the European red frog Rana temporaria. The peptide displayed the highest activity of temporins studied to date, against both human erythrocytes and bacterial and fungal strains. At variance with other known temporins, which are mainly active against Gram-positive bacteria, temporin L was also active against Gram-negative strains such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa A.T.C.C. 15692 and Escherichia coli D21 at concentrations comparable with those that are microbiocidal to Gram-positive bacteria. In addition, temporin L was cytotoxic to three different human tumour cell lines (Hut-78, K-562 and U-937), causing a necrosis-like cell death, although sensitivity to the peptide varied markedly with the specific cell line tested. A study of the interaction of temporin L with liposomes of different lipid compositions revealed that the peptide causes perturbation of bilayer integrity of both neutral and negatively charged membranes, as revealed by the release of a vesicle-encapsulated fluorescent marker, and that the action of the peptide is modulated to some extent by membrane lipid composition. In particular, the presence of negatively charged lipids in the model bilayer inhibits the lytic power of temporin L. We also show that the release of fluorescent markers caused by temporin L is size-dependent and that the peptide does not have a detergent-like effect on the membrane, suggesting that perturbation of bilayer organization takes place on a local scale, i.e. through the formation of pore-like openings.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
J. Aasi1, J. Abadie1, B. P. Abbott1, Richard J. Abbott1  +903 moreInstitutions (115)
TL;DR: The results of searches for gravitational waves from a large selection of pulsars using data from the most recent science runs (S6, VSR2 and VSR4) of the initial generation of interferometric gravitational wave detectors LIGO (Laser Interferometric Gravitational-wave Observatory) and Virgo as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: We present the results of searches for gravitational waves from a large selection of pulsars using data from the most recent science runs (S6, VSR2 and VSR4) of the initial generation of interferometric gravitational wave detectors LIGO (Laser Interferometric Gravitational-wave Observatory) and Virgo. We do not see evidence for gravitational wave emission from any of the targeted sources but produce upper limits on the emission amplitude. We highlight the results from seven young pulsars with large spin-down luminosities. We reach within a factor of five of the canonical spin-down limit for all seven of these, whilst for the Crab and Vela pulsars we further surpass their spin-down limits. We present new or updated limits for 172 other pulsars (including both young and millisecond pulsars). Now that the detectors are undergoing major upgrades, and, for completeness, we bring together all of the most up-to-date results from all pulsars searched for during the operations of the first-generation LIGO, Virgo and GEO600 detectors. This gives a total of 195 pulsars including the most recent results described in this paper.

169 citations


Authors

Showing all 11160 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Herbert W. Marsh15264689512
Michele Parrinello13363794674
Dafna D. Gladman129103675273
Peter J. Anderson12096663635
Alessandro Vespignani11841963824
C. Patrignani1171754110008
Hermine Katharina Wöhri11662955540
Francesco Muntoni11596352629
Giancarlo Comi10996154270
Giorgio Parisi10894160746
Luca Benini101145347862
Alessandro Cardini101128853804
Nicola Serra100104246640
Jurg Keller9938935628
Giulio Usai9751739392
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202374
2022230
20211,898
20201,903
20191,636
20181,600