Institution
University of Colorado Colorado Springs
Education•Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States•
About: University of Colorado Colorado Springs is a education organization based out in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 6664 authors who have published 10872 publications receiving 323416 citations. The organization is also known as: UCCS & University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Thin film, Capacitor, Ferroelectricity
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a reduced-order model of the growth process of the solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) layer along with the resulting resistance rise and capacity loss is presented.
81 citations
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TL;DR: Associations between telomere length (TL) and TL‐related genes and risk of breast cancer risk in an admixed population of US non‐Hispanic white and Hispanic and Mexican women are evaluated and support for an association is provided.
Abstract: Telomeres are involved in maintaining genomic stability. Previous studies have linked both telomere length (TL) and telomere-related genes with cancer. We evaluated associations between telomere-related genes, TL, and breast cancer risk in an admixed population of US non-Hispanic white (1,481 cases, 1,586 controls) and U.S. Hispanic and Mexican women (2,111 cases, 2,597 controls) from the Breast Cancer Health Disparities Study. TL was assessed in 1,500 women based on their genetic ancestry. TL-related genes assessed were MEN1, MRE11A, RECQL5, TEP1, TERC, TERF2, TERT, TNKS, and TNKS2. Longer TL was associated with increased breast cancer risk [odds ratio (OR) 1.87, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.38, 2.55], with the highest risk (OR 3.11, 95% CI 1.74, 5.67 p interaction 0.02) among women with high Indigenous American ancestry. Several TL-related single nucleotide polymorphisms had modest association with breast cancer risk overall, including TEP1 rs93886 (OR 0.82, 95% CI 0.70,0.95); TERF2 rs3785074 (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.03,1.24); TERT rs4246742 (OR 0.85, 95% CI 0.77,0.93); TERT rs10069690 (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.03,1.24); TERT rs2242652 (OR 1.51, 95% CI 1.11,2.04); and TNKS rs6990300 (OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.81,0.97). Several differences in association were detected by hormone receptor status of tumors. Most notable were associations with TERT rs2736118 (ORadj 6.18, 95% CI 2.90, 13.19) with estrogen receptor negative/progesterone receptor positive (ER-/PR+) tumors and TERT rs2735940 (ORadj 0.73, 95% CI 0.59, 0.91) with ER-/PR- tumors. These data provide support for an association between TL and TL-related genes and risk of breast cancer. The association may be modified by hormone receptor status and genetic ancestry.
81 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a significant improvement of modulation bandwidth from 2 × 1$ photonic crystal vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser arrays was achieved by control of injection bias conditions to array elements.
Abstract: We show a significant improvement of modulation bandwidth from $2\times 1$ photonic crystal vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser arrays. Control of injection bias conditions to array elements enables resonance tuning of each element with variation of the phase relation and coherence of the array, resulting in the ability to tailor the modulation response. A bandwidth of 37 GHz is obtained under highly single-mode coherent operation with narrow spectral width and increased output power while the laser array is biased at low current density. Lasers with such performance characteristics may greatly enhance high-rate data transfer in computer server, data center, and supercomputer applications with potentially long device lifetime.
81 citations
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TL;DR: A novel model that jointly considers the VR application type, transmission delay, VR video quality, and users’ awareness of the virtual environment to measure the BIP for wireless VR users and predicts the orientation and locations of VR users is proposed.
Abstract: In this paper, the problem of enhancing the virtual reality (VR) experience for wireless users is investigated by minimizing the occurrence of breaks in presence (BIP) that can detach the users from their virtual world. To measure the BIP for wireless VR users, a novel model that jointly considers the VR application type, transmission delay, VR video quality, and users’ awareness of the virtual environment is proposed. In the developed model, base stations (BSs) transmit VR videos to the wireless VR users using directional transmission links so as to provide high data rates for the VR users, thus, reducing the number of BIP for each user. Since the body movements of a VR user may result in a blockage of its wireless link, the location and orientation of VR users must also be considered when minimizing BIP. The BIP minimization problem is formulated as an optimization problem which jointly considers the predictions of users’ locations, orientations, and their BS association. To predict the orientation and locations of VR users, a distributed learning algorithm based on the machine learning framework of deep echo state networks (ESNs) is proposed. The proposed algorithm uses federated learning to enable multiple BSs to locally train their deep ESNs using their collected data and cooperatively build a learning model to predict the entire users’ locations and orientations. Using these predictions, the user association policy that minimizes BIP is derived. Simulation results demonstrate that the developed algorithm reduces the users’ BIP by up to 16% and 26%, respectively, compared to centralized ESN and deep learning algorithms.
81 citations
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12 Mar 2003TL;DR: In this paper, a system for conveying a radio frequency (RF) signal from a base station (16) to a detached integrated circuit (IC) has an intermediate resonant circuit (4) and an IC (2).
Abstract: A system for conveying a radio frequency (RF) signal from a base station (16) to a detached integrated circuit (IC) has an intermediate resonant circuit (4) and an IC (2). The intermediate resonant circuit is configured to resonate in response to the RF signal from the base station, reproducing the RF signal. The IC has an integral resonant circuit (6, 8, 10) configured to resonate in response to the reproduced RF signal. The IC and the intermediate resonant circuit are affixed proximate each other. Both are separate from the base station and each other. Either or both of the intermediate resonant circuit and the integral resonant circuit may contact a high magnetic permeability layer. The intermediate resonant circuit may be formed of conductive ink.
81 citations
Authors
Showing all 6706 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Jeff Greenberg | 105 | 542 | 43600 |
James F. Scott | 99 | 714 | 58515 |
Martin Wikelski | 89 | 420 | 25821 |
Neil W. Kowall | 89 | 279 | 34943 |
Ananth Dodabalapur | 85 | 394 | 27246 |
Tom Pyszczynski | 82 | 246 | 30590 |
Patrick S. Kamath | 78 | 466 | 31281 |
Connie M. Weaver | 77 | 473 | 30985 |
Alejandro Lucia | 75 | 680 | 23967 |
Michael J. McKenna | 70 | 356 | 16227 |
Timothy J. Craig | 69 | 458 | 18340 |
Sheldon Solomon | 67 | 150 | 23916 |
Michael H. Stone | 65 | 370 | 16355 |
Christopher J. Gostout | 65 | 334 | 13593 |
Edward T. Ryan | 60 | 303 | 11822 |