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Institution

University of California, Irvine

EducationIrvine, California, United States
About: University of California, Irvine is a education organization based out in Irvine, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 47031 authors who have published 113602 publications receiving 5521832 citations. The organization is also known as: UC Irvine & UCI.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Poison control, Cancer, Gene


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
S. Fukuda1, Y. Fukuda1, T. Hayakawa1, E. Ichihara1  +183 moreInstitutions (28)
TL;DR: Super-Kamiokande is the world's largest water Cherenkov detector, with net mass 50,000 tons as discussed by the authors, which collected 1678 live-days of data, observing neutrinos from the Sun, Earth's atmosphere, and the K2K long-baseline neutrino beam with high efficiency.
Abstract: Super-Kamiokande is the world's largest water Cherenkov detector, with net mass 50,000 tons. During the period April, 1996 to July, 2001, Super-Kamiokande I collected 1678 live-days of data, observing neutrinos from the Sun, Earth's atmosphere, and the K2K long-baseline neutrino beam with high efficiency. These data provided crucial information for our current understanding of neutrino oscillations, as well as setting stringent limits on nucleon decay. In this paper, we describe the detector in detail, including its site, configuration, data acquisition equipment, online and offline software, and calibration systems which were used during Super-Kamiokande I.

708 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The empirical analysis found a strong positive interaction effect between IT infrastructure and e-commerce capability, which suggests that their complementarity positively contributes to firm performance in terms of sales per employee, inventory turnover, and cost reduction.
Abstract: This study seeks to assess the business value of e-commerce capability and information technology (IT) infrastructure in the context of electronic business at the firm level. Grounded in the IT business-value literature and enhanced by the resource-based theory of the firm, we developed a research framework in which both the main effects and the interaction effects of e-commerce and IT on firm performance were tested. Within this theoretical framework, we formulated several hypotheses. We then developed a multidimensional e-commerce capability construct, and after establishing its validity and reliability, tested the hypotheses with empirical data from 114 companies in the retail industry. Controlling for variations of firm size and subindustry effects, our empirical analysis found a strong positive interaction effect between IT infrastructure and e-commerce capability. This suggests that their complementarity positively contributes to firm performance in terms of sales per employee, inventory turnover, and cost reduction. The results are consistent with the resource-based theory, and provide empirical evidence to the complementary synergy between front-end e-commerce capability and back-end IT infrastructure. Combined together, they become more effective in producing business value. Yet the value of this synergy has not been recognized in the IT payoff literature. The "productivity paradox" observed in various studies has been attributed to variation in methods and measures, yet we offer an additional explanation: ignoring complementarities in business value measurement implies that the impact of IT was seriously underestimated. Our results emphasized the integration of resources as a feasible path to e-commerce value--companies need to enhance the integration between front-end e-commerce capability and back-end IT infrastructure in order to reap the benefits of e-commerce investments.

708 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Seb Oliver1, James J. Bock2, James J. Bock3, Bruno Altieri4, Alexandre Amblard5, V. Arumugam6, Herve Aussel7, Tom Babbedge8, Alexandre Beelen, Matthieu Béthermin7, Andrew Blain3, Alessandro Boselli9, C. Bridge3, Drew Brisbin10, V. Buat9, Denis Burgarella9, N. Castro-Rodríguez11, N. Castro-Rodríguez12, Antonio Cava13, P. Chanial7, Michele Cirasuolo14, David L. Clements8, A. Conley15, L. Conversi4, Asantha Cooray3, Asantha Cooray16, C. D. Dowell3, C. D. Dowell2, Elizabeth Dubois1, Eli Dwek17, Simon Dye18, Stephen Anthony Eales19, David Elbaz7, Duncan Farrah1, A. Feltre20, P. Ferrero12, P. Ferrero11, N. Fiolet21, M. Fox8, Alberto Franceschini20, Walter Kieran Gear19, E. Giovannoli9, Jason Glenn15, Yan Gong16, E. A. González Solares22, Matthew Joseph Griffin19, Mark Halpern23, Martin Harwit, Evanthia Hatziminaoglou, Sebastien Heinis9, Peter Hurley1, Ho Seong Hwang7, A. Hyde8, Edo Ibar14, O. Ilbert9, K. G. Isaak24, Rob Ivison6, Rob Ivison14, Guilaine Lagache, E. Le Floc'h7, L. R. Levenson3, L. R. Levenson2, B. Lo Faro20, Nanyao Y. Lu3, S. C. Madden7, Bruno Maffei25, Georgios E. Magdis7, G. Mainetti20, Lucia Marchetti20, G. Marsden23, J. Marshall3, J. Marshall2, A. M. J. Mortier8, Hien Nguyen3, Hien Nguyen2, B. O'Halloran8, Alain Omont21, Mat Page26, P. Panuzzo7, Andreas Papageorgiou19, H. Patel8, Chris Pearson27, Chris Pearson28, Ismael Perez-Fournon12, Ismael Perez-Fournon11, Michael Pohlen19, Jonathan Rawlings26, Gwenifer Raymond19, Dimitra Rigopoulou29, Dimitra Rigopoulou27, L. Riguccini7, D. Rizzo8, Giulia Rodighiero20, Isaac Roseboom6, Isaac Roseboom1, Michael Rowan-Robinson8, M. Sanchez Portal4, Benjamin L. Schulz3, Douglas Scott23, Nick Seymour30, Nick Seymour26, D. L. Shupe3, A. J. Smith1, Jamie Stevens31, M. Symeonidis26, Markos Trichas32, K. E. Tugwell26, Mattia Vaccari20, Ivan Valtchanov4, Joaquin Vieira3, Marco P. Viero3, L. Vigroux21, Lifan Wang1, Robyn L. Ward1, Julie Wardlow16, G. Wright14, C. K. Xu3, Michael Zemcov3, Michael Zemcov2 
TL;DR: The Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES) is a legacy program designed to map a set of nested fields totalling ~380 deg^2 as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey, HerMES, is a legacy program designed to map a set of nested fields totalling ~380 deg^2. Fields range in size from 0.01 to ~20 deg^2, using Herschel-SPIRE (at 250, 350 and 500 \mu m), and Herschel-PACS (at 100 and 160 \mu m), with an additional wider component of 270 deg^2 with SPIRE alone. These bands cover the peak of the redshifted thermal spectral energy distribution from interstellar dust and thus capture the re-processed optical and ultra-violet radiation from star formation that has been absorbed by dust, and are critical for forming a complete multi-wavelength understanding of galaxy formation and evolution. The survey will detect of order 100,000 galaxies at 5\sigma in some of the best studied fields in the sky. Additionally, HerMES is closely coordinated with the PACS Evolutionary Probe survey. Making maximum use of the full spectrum of ancillary data, from radio to X-ray wavelengths, it is designed to: facilitate redshift determination; rapidly identify unusual objects; and understand the relationships between thermal emission from dust and other processes. Scientific questions HerMES will be used to answer include: the total infrared emission of galaxies; the evolution of the luminosity function; the clustering properties of dusty galaxies; and the properties of populations of galaxies which lie below the confusion limit through lensing and statistical techniques. This paper defines the survey observations and data products, outlines the primary scientific goals of the HerMES team, and reviews some of the early results.

707 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
07 Aug 2002
TL;DR: A novel paradigm for data management in which a third party service provider hosts "database as a service", providing its customers with seamless mechanisms to create, store, and access their databases at the host site is explored.
Abstract: We explore a novel paradigm for data management in which a third party service provider hosts "database as a service", providing its customers with seamless mechanisms to create, store, and access their databases at the host site. Such a model alleviates the need for organizations to purchase expensive hardware and software, deal with software upgrades, and hire professionals for administrative and maintenance tasks which are taken over by the service provider. We have developed and deployed a database service on the Internet, called NetDB2, which is in constant use. In a sense, a data management model supported by NetDB2 provides an effective mechanism for organizations to purchase data management as a service, thereby freeing them to concentrate on their core businesses. Among the primary challenges introduced by "database as a service" are the additional overhead of remote access to data, an infrastructure to guarantee data privacy, and user interface design for such a service. These issues are investigated. We identify data privacy as a particularly vital problem and propose alternative solutions based on data encryption. The paper is meant as a challenge for the database community to explore a rich set of research issues that arise in developing such a service.

707 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The biology of oxidative stress, including protective and injurious effects that explain the impact of particulate matter-induced oxidative stress in asthma are reviewed, with an emphasis on the pro-oxidative effects of diesel exhaust particles and their chemicals in the respiratory tract.

707 citations


Authors

Showing all 47751 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Daniel Levy212933194778
Rob Knight2011061253207
Lewis C. Cantley196748169037
Dennis W. Dickson1911243148488
Terrie E. Moffitt182594150609
Joseph Biederman1791012117440
John R. Yates1771036129029
John A. Rogers1771341127390
Avshalom Caspi170524113583
Yang Gao1682047146301
Carl W. Cotman165809105323
John H. Seinfeld165921114911
Gregg C. Fonarow1611676126516
Jerome I. Rotter1561071116296
David Cella1561258106402
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20242
2023252
20221,224
20216,518
20206,348
20195,610