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Institution

University of Fribourg

EducationFribourg, Freiburg, Switzerland
About: University of Fribourg is a education organization based out in Fribourg, Freiburg, Switzerland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 6040 authors who have published 14975 publications receiving 542500 citations. The organization is also known as: UNIFR & Universität Freiburg.


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Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the main sources of national competitive advantages based on the Porter's diamond model are discussed, and the role of regional clusters of industries is explained, how MNCs can benefit from locating their operations in country markets with a high level of competitive advantage or in regional industry clusters.
Abstract: This Chapter gives an overview of the main sources of national competitive advantages, based on Porter’s diamond model, and discusses the role of regional clusters of industries. In this context it is explained, how MNCs can benefit from locating their operations in country markets with a high level of national competitive advantage or in regional industry clusters.

184 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is within this conceptual framework that this paper reviews the pathogenesis of obesity-related hypertension, which is highly complex and many factors act together to promote vasoconstriction and sodium retention.
Abstract: Obesity and arterial hypertension are important public health problems. Both overweight and hypertension predispose to cardiovascular diseases, such as myocardial infarction, stroke and renal failure. Moreover, overweight clearly predisposes to hypertension, and thus to an increased prevalence of cardiovascular diseases. This in turn favors inactivity and further weight gain, leading to an exacerbation of cardiovascular disorders. Obesity, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases thus contribute to three corners of a vicious triangle. It is within this conceptual framework that this paper reviews the pathogenesis of obesity-related hypertension, which is highly complex. Many factors act together to promote vasoconstriction and sodium retention. Leptin, free fatty acids and insulin, whose levels are increased in obesity, may act synergistically to stimulate sympathetic activity and vasoconstriction. In addition, obesity-induced insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction may operate as amplifiers of the vasoconstrictor response. Finally, increased renal tubular reabsorption of sodium may also occur, caused by an increased renal sympathetic nerve activity, the direct effect of insulin, hyperactivity of the renin-angiotensin system and possibly by an alteration of intrarenal physical forces. All together, these factors will lead to sustained hypertension. Because the prevalence of obesity was steadily increasing in the last decades, leading to an increased prevalence of hypertension and cardiovascular disorders, obesity and hypertension will most likely become the health challenges of the twenty-first century.

183 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of daily climatological data covering the period from 1901 to 1992 for four locations in Switzerland (Zurich, Lugano, Davos, and Santis) has been made.
Abstract: An analysis of daily climatological data covering the period from 1901 to 1992 for four locations in Switzerland (Zurich, Lugano, Davos, and Santis) has been made. The study has highlighted the fact that climate change this century is characterized by increases in minimum temperatures of about 2 K, a more modest increase in maximum temperatures (in some instances a decrease of maxima in the latter part of the record), little trend in the precipitation data, and a general decrease of sunshine duration through to the mid 1980s. The interannual variability is generally large, and filtering of the data to remove high-frequency noise shows that the regional climate undergoes a series of fluctuations of between 8 and 20 years' duration. The temperature change over this century is of greater magnitude than the global temperature changes published in the literature, reflecting an amplification of the global signal in the Alpine region; warming has been most intense in the 1940s, followed by the 1980s; the cooling which intervened from the 1950s to the late 1970s was not sufficient to offset the warming in the middle of the century. Pressure statistics have been compiled as a means of providing a link between the regional-scale climatological variables and the synoptic, supra-regional scale. These statistics show that pressure also exhibits a number of decadal-scale fluctuations, with the appearance of a new and anomalous behavior in the 1980s; in this decade, pressure reaches annual average values far higher than at other times this century. The pressure field is well correlated with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) Index for distinct periods of the record (1931–1950 and 1971–1990) and is almost decorrelated from the NAO Index for the other decades of the century; this is indicative of transition from one climatic regime to another, dominated by zonal flow when the correlation with the NAO Index is high. In the 1980s, when zonal flow over the North Atlantic is strong, episodes of persistent, anomalously high pressures (blocking highs) are seen to occur over Switzerland, particularly during the winter season. The difference between the zonal and non-zonal regimes is particularly marked between the decade of the 1950s and that of the 1980s. The impact of this change between the 1950s and the 1980s on a number of climatological variables has been investigated statistically in order to provide an illustration of the manner in which changes in synoptic regimes (i.e., ‘climate change’) impacts upon climate characteristics on a regional scale. The analysis shows that temperature, precipitation, snow depth, and sunshine duration are indeed sensitive to large-scale influences; not only can yearly mean changes be quantified, but also seasonal and monthly fluctuations.

183 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results are in accordance with an explanation of the face-inversion effect in which the disruption of configural facial information plays the critical role in memory for faces, and in which configural information corresponds to spatial information that is processed in a way which is sensitive to local properties of the facial features involved.
Abstract: When faces are turned upside down, recognition is known to be severely disrupted. This effect is thought to be due to disruption of configural processing. Recently, Leder and Bruce (2000, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A 53 513-536) argued that configural information in face processing consists at least partly of locally processed relations between facial elements. In three experiments we investigated whether a local relational feature (the interocular distance) is processed differently in upside-down versus upright faces. In experiment 1 participants decided in which of two sequentially presented photographic faces the interocular distance was larger. The decision was more difficult in upside-down presentation. Three different conditions were used in experiment 2 to investigate whether this deficit depends upon parts of the face beyond the eyes themselves; displays showed the eye region alone, the eyes and nose, or the eyes and nose and mouth. The availability of additional features did not interact with the inversion effect which was observed strongly even when the eyes were shown in isolation. In experiment 3 all eyes were turned upside down in the inverted face condition as in the Thatcher illusion (Thompson, 1980 Perception 9 483-484). In this case no inversion effect was found. These results are in accordance with an explanation of the face-inversion effect in which the disruption of configural facial information plays the critical role in memory for faces, and in which configural information corresponds to spatial information that is processed in a way which is sensitive to local properties of the facial features involved.

182 citations


Authors

Showing all 6204 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Jens Nielsen1491752104005
Sw. Banerjee1461906124364
Hans Peter Beck143113491858
Patrice Nordmann12779067031
Abraham Z. Snyder12532991997
Csaba Szabó12395861791
Robert Edwards12177574552
Laurent Poirel11762153680
Thomas Münzel116105557716
David G. Amaral11230249094
F. Blanc107151458418
Markus Stoffel10262050796
Vincenzo Balzani10147645722
Enrico Bertini9986538167
Sandeep Kumar94156338652
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202367
2022348
20211,110
20201,112
2019966
2018924