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Institution

University of Crete

EducationRethymno, Greece
About: University of Crete is a education organization based out in Rethymno, Greece. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 8681 authors who have published 21684 publications receiving 709078 citations. The organization is also known as: Panepistimio Kritis.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A quick and introductory overview of some holographic superconductor models with s-wave, p-wave and d-wave orders can be found in this paper, where the competition and coexistence of these superconductivity orders are studied.
Abstract: In the last years it has been shown that some properties of strongly coupled superconductors can be potentially described by classical general relativity living in one higher dimension, which is known as holographic superconductors This paper gives a quick and introductory overview of some holographic superconductor models with s-wave, p-wave and d-wave orders in the literature from point of view of bottom-up, and summarizes some basic properties of these holographic models in various regimes The competition and coexistence of these superconductivity orders are also studied in these superconductor models

231 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the CLUMPY torus models and a Bayesian approach to fit the infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and ground-based high-angular resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy of 13 nearby Seyfert galaxies.
Abstract: We used the CLUMPY torus models and a Bayesian approach to fit the infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and ground-based high-angular resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy of 13 nearby Seyfert galaxies. This allowed us to put tight constraints on torus model parameters such as the viewing angle, the radial thickness of the torus Y, the angular size of the cloud distribution sigma_torus, and the average number of clouds along radial equatorial rays N_0. The viewing angle is not the only parameter controlling the classification of a galaxy into a type 1 or a type 2. In principle type 2s could be viewed at any viewing angle as long as there is one cloud along the line of sight. A more relevant quantity for clumpy media is the probability for an AGN photon to escape unabsorbed. In our sample, type 1s have relatively high escape probabilities, while in type 2s, as expected, tend to be low. Our fits also confirmed that the tori of Seyfert galaxies are compact with torus model radii in the range 1-6pc. The scaling of the models to the data also provided the AGN bolometric luminosities, which were found to be in good agreement with estimates from the literature. When we combined our sample of Seyfert galaxies with a sample of PG quasars from the literature to span a range of L_bol(AGN)~10^{43}-10^{47}erg/s, we found plausible evidence of the receding torus. That is, there is a tendency for the torus geometrical covering factor to be lower at high AGN luminosities than at low AGN luminosities. This is because at low AGN luminosities the tori appear to have wider angular sizes and more clouds along radial equatorial rays. We cannot, however rule out the possibility that this is due to contamination by extended dust structures not associated with the dusty torus at low AGN luminosities, since most of these in our sample are hosted in highly inclined galaxies. (Abridged)

230 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that UK is effective in the treatment of loculated pleural effusions through the lysis of pleural adhesions and not through the volume effect.
Abstract: Intrapleural administration of fibrinolytic agents has been shown to be effective and safe in the treatment of loculated parapneumonic pleural effusions. However, controlled studies of the possible role of the activity of urokinase (UK) through the volume effect are lacking. We therefore investigated the hypothesis that UK is effective through the lysis of pleural adhesions and not through the volume effect. Thirty-one consecutive patients with multiloculated pleural effusions were randomly assigned to receive either intrapleural UK (15 patients) or normal saline (NS) (16 patients) for 3 d, in a double-blind manner. All patients had inadequate drainage through a chest tube (< 70 ml/24 h). UK was given daily through the chest tube in a dose of 100.000 IU diluted in 100 ml of NS. Controls were given the same volume of NS intrapleurally. Response was assessed by clinical outcome, fluid drainage, chest radiography, pleural ultrasonography (US) and/or computed tomography (CT). Clinical and radiographic improvement was noted in all but two patients in the UK group but in only four in the control group. The net mean volume drained during the 3-d treatment period was significantly greater in the UK group (970 +/- 75 ml versus 280 +/- 55 ml, p < 0.001). Pleural fluid drainage was complete in 13 (86.5%) patients in the UK group (two patients were treated through video-assisted thoracoscopy) but in only four (25%) in the control group. Twelve patients in the control group were subsequently treated with UK and six of them had complete drainage; the remaining six patients had complete drainage after video-assisted thoracoscopy. Our results suggest that UK is effective in the treatment of loculated pleural effusions through the lysis of pleural adhesions and not through the volume effect.

230 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2005-Chest
TL;DR: Results confirm that apoptotic hyperplastic epithelial cells are present in patients with IPF and that the expression of p53, p21, bax, and caspase-3 appears to be up-regulated and that of bcl-2 down-regulated in these cells.

229 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Detecting of attention-invoking audiovisual segments is formulated in this work on the basis of saliency models for the audio, visual, and textual information conveyed in a video stream, forming the basis for a generic, bottom-up video summarization algorithm.
Abstract: Multimodal streams of sensory information are naturally parsed and integrated by humans using signal-level feature extraction and higher level cognitive processes. Detection of attention-invoking audiovisual segments is formulated in this work on the basis of saliency models for the audio, visual, and textual information conveyed in a video stream. Aural or auditory saliency is assessed by cues that quantify multifrequency waveform modulations, extracted through nonlinear operators and energy tracking. Visual saliency is measured through a spatiotemporal attention model driven by intensity, color, and orientation. Textual or linguistic saliency is extracted from part-of-speech tagging on the subtitles information available with most movie distributions. The individual saliency streams, obtained from modality-depended cues, are integrated in a multimodal saliency curve, modeling the time-varying perceptual importance of the composite video stream and signifying prevailing sensory events. The multimodal saliency representation forms the basis of a generic, bottom-up video summarization algorithm. Different fusion schemes are evaluated on a movie database of multimodal saliency annotations with comparative results provided across modalities. The produced summaries, based on low-level features and content-independent fusion and selection, are of subjectively high aesthetic and informative quality.

229 citations


Authors

Showing all 8725 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mercouri G. Kanatzidis1521854113022
T. J. Pearson150895126533
Stylianos E. Antonarakis13874693605
William Wijns12775295517
Andrea Comastri11170649119
Costas M. Soukoulis10864450208
Elias Anaissie10737242808
Jian Zhang107306469715
Emmanouil T. Dermitzakis10129482496
Andreas Engel9944833494
Nikos C. Kyrpides9671162360
David J. Kerr9554439408
Manolis Kogevinas9562328521
Thomas Walz9225529981
Jean-Paul Latgé9134329152
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202328
2022103
20211,380
20201,288
20191,180
20181,131