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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.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss resonance and threshold phenomena in low-energy electron collisions with molecules and clusters, and the theoretical description of electron-molecule collisions generally requires an adequate description of electronic, vibrational and rotational degrees of freedom.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses resonance and threshold phenomena in low-energy electron collisions with molecules and clusters. Low-energy collisions of electrons with atoms and molecules are among the most important elementary processes in gaseous environments such as discharges, arcs, gas lasers, gaseous dielectrics and the earth's atmosphere. The dynamics behavior of low-energy electron-molecule collisions is discussed. The dynamical behavior of slow electrons traversing gases is to a large extent determined by two effects: the energy dependent evolution of the scattering phases for the relevant partial waves and the influence of temporary negative ion states (resonances). Some aspects of resonance and threshold phenomena are discussed. The theoretical description of electron-molecule collisions generally requires an adequate description of electronic, vibrational and rotational degrees of freedom. However, if the typical collision time is short compared to the rotational period, the molecule can be treated as having a fixed orientation during the collision process, and the result for the cross-section can be averaged over orientations. Treatment of vibrational dynamics is usually more important and more challenging to the theory. In the electron energy region important for applications, many inelastic processes such as vibrational excitation and dissociative electron attachment are driven by negative-ion resonances. The theoretical description of vibrational dynamics in these cases is usually based on the nonlocal complex potential describing the nuclear motion in the intermediate negative-ion state.

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In ISR-expressing plants the capacity to convert 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate to ethylene was significantly enhanced, providing a greater potential to produce ethylene upon pathogen attack, and indicating that rhizobacteria-mediated ISR is not based on the induction of changes in the biosynthesis of either JA or ethylene.

262 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigating neuronal activity in the anterior striatum while monkeys repeatedly learned to associate new instruction stimuli with known behavioral reactions and reinforcers showed changes related to adaptations or reductions of expectations in new task situations and displayed activations that might serve to induce structural changes during learning.
Abstract: Tremblay, Leon, Jeffrey R. Hollerman, and Wolfram Schultz. Modifications of reward expectation-related neuronal activity during learning in primate striatum. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 964–977, 1998. Thi...

259 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the plant cuticle composed of cutin, a lipid-derived polyester, and cuticular waxes covers the aerial portions of plants and constitutes a hydrophobic extracellular matrix layer that protects plants against environmental stresses.
Abstract: The plant cuticle composed of cutin, a lipid-derived polyester, and cuticular waxes covers the aerial portions of plants and constitutes a hydrophobic extracellular matrix layer that protects plants against environmental stresses. The botrytis-resistant 1 (bre1) mutant of Arabidopsis reveals that a permeable cuticle does not facilitate the entry of fungal pathogens in general, but surprisingly causes an arrest of invasion by Botrytis. BRE1 was identified to be long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase2 (LACS2) that has previously been shown to be involved in cuticle development and was here found to be essential for cutin biosynthesis. bre1/lacs2 has a five-fold reduction in dicarboxylic acids, the typical monomers of Arabidopsis cutin. Comparison of bre1/lacs2 with the mutants lacerata and hothead revealed that an increased permeability of the cuticle facilitates perception of putative elicitors in potato dextrose broth, leading to the presence of antifungal compound(s) at the surface of Arabidopsis plants that confer resistance to Botrytis and Sclerotinia. Arabidopsis plants with a perme

259 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Taken together, these data demonstrate that the light-induced signalling pathway interacts with the pathogen/SA-mediated signal transduction route.
Abstract: Summary The interaction of phytochrome signalling with the SA signal transduction pathway has been investigated in Arabidopsis using single and multiple mutants affected in light perception (phyA and phyB deficient) and light-signal processing (psi2, phytochrome signalling). The induction of PR1 by SA and functional analogues has been found to strictly correlate with the activity of the signalling pathway controlled by both phyA and phyB photoreceptors. In darkness as well as dim light, and independently of a carbohydrate source, SA-induced PR gene expression as well as the hypersensitive response to pathogens (HR) are strongly reduced. Moreover, the initiation of HR also exhibits a strict dependence upon both the presence and the amplitude of a phytochrome-elicited signal. The growth of an incompatible strain of bacterial a pathogen (Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato) was enhanced in phyA-phyB and decreased in psi2 mutants. While functional chloroplasts were found necessary for the development of an HR, the induction of PRs was strictly dependent on light, but independent of functional chloroplasts. Taken together, these data demonstrate that the light-induced signalling pathway interacts with the pathogen/SA-mediated signal transduction route. These results are summarized in a formalism that allows qualitative computer simulation.

258 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