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Institution

University of Houston

EducationHouston, Texas, United States
About: University of Houston is a education organization based out in Houston, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 23074 authors who have published 53903 publications receiving 1641968 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Paul E. Goss1, Brittany L. Lee1, Brittany L. Lee2, Tanja Badovinac-Crnjevic1, Kathrin Strasser-Weippl, Yanin Chavarri-Guerra, Jessica St. Louis1, Cynthia Villarreal-Garza, Karla Unger-Saldaña3, Mayra Ferreyra, Marcio Debiasi4, Pedro E.R. Liedke5, Diego Touya6, Gustavo Werutsky4, Michaela J. Higgins1, Lei Fan1, Claudia Vasconcelos, Eduardo Cazap7, Carlos S. Vallejos, Alejandro Mohar8, Felicia Marie Knaul1, Héctor Arreola, Rekha Batura9, Silvana Luciani10, Richard Sullivan9, Dianne M. Finkelstein1, Sergio Daniel Simon11, Carlos H. Barrios4, Rebecca S. Kightlinger12, Andres Gelrud13, Vladimir Bychkovsky14, Gilberto Lopes15, Gilberto Lopes16, Stephen Stefani, Marcelo Blaya17, Fabiano Hahn Souza18, Franklin Santana Santos, Alberto Kaemmerer, Evandro de Azambuja, Andres Felipe Cardona Zorilla, Raúl Murillo, Jose Jeronimo19, Vivien Tsu19, André Lopes Carvalho, Carlos Ferreira Gil, Cinthya Sternberg, Alfonso Dueñas-González8, Dennis C. Sgroi1, Mauricio Cuello6, Rodrigo Fresco6, Rui Manuel Reis, G. Masera20, Raul Gabus21, Raul C. Ribeiro22, Raul C. Ribeiro23, Renata Knust, Gustavo Ismael, Eduardo Rosenblatt24, B. M. C. Roth25, Luisa L. Villa26, Argelia Lara Solares, Marta Ximena Leon27, Isabel Torres-Vigil28, Isabel Torres-Vigil29, Alfredo Covarrubias-Gómez, Andrés Hernández, Mariela Bertolino, Gilberto Schwartsmann5, Sergio Santillana30, Francisco J. Esteva28, Luis Fein, Max S. Mano, Henry L. Gomez, Marc Hurlbert, Alessandra Durstine31, Gustavo S. Azenha31 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the findings of their Cancer Commission and their recommendations to encourage Latin American stakeholders to redouble their efforts to address this increasing cancer burden and to prevent it from worsening and threatening their societies.
Abstract: Non-communicable diseases, including cancer, are overtaking infectious disease as the leading health-care threat in middle-income and low-income countries. Latin American and Caribbean countries are struggling to respond to increasing morbidity and death from advanced disease. Health ministries and health-care systems in these countries face many challenges caring for patients with advanced cancer: inadequate funding; inequitable distribution of resources and services; inadequate numbers, training, and distribution of health-care personnel and equipment; lack of adequate care for many populations based on socioeconomic, geographic, ethnic, and other factors; and current systems geared toward the needs of wealthy, urban minorities at a cost to the entire population. This burgeoning cancer problem threatens to cause widespread suffering and economic peril to the countries of Latin America. Prompt and deliberate actions must be taken to avoid this scenario. Increasing efforts towards prevention of cancer and avoidance of advanced, stage IV disease will reduce suffering and mortality and will make overall cancer care more affordable. We hope the findings of our Commission and our recommendations will inspire Latin American stakeholders to redouble their efforts to address this increasing cancer burden and to prevent it from worsening and threatening their societies.

418 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel concept of edge computing for mobile blockchain and an economic approach for edge computing resource management are introduced and a prototype of mobile edge computing enabled blockchain systems are presented with experimental results to justify the proposed concept.
Abstract: Blockchain, as the backbone technology of the current popular Bitcoin digital currency, has become a promising decentralized data management framework. Although blockchain has been widely adopted in many applications (e.g., finance, healthcare, and logistics), its application in mobile services is still limited. This is due to the fact that blockchain users need to solve preset proof-of-work puzzles to add new data (i.e., a block) to the blockchain. Solving the proof of work, however, consumes substantial resources in terms of CPU time and energy, which is not suitable for resource-limited mobile devices. To facilitate blockchain applications in future mobile Internet of Things systems, multiple access mobile edge computing appears to be an auspicious solution to solve the proof-of-work puzzles for mobile users. We first introduce a novel concept of edge computing for mobile blockchain. Then we introduce an economic approach for edge computing resource management. Moreover, a prototype of mobile edge computing enabled blockchain systems is presented with experimental results to justify the proposed concept.

417 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
P. Agnes1, Ivone F. M. Albuquerque2, Thomas Alexander3, A. K. Alton4  +193 moreInstitutions (30)
TL;DR: The results of a search for dark matter weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) in the mass range below 20 GeV/c^{2} using a target of low-radioactivity argon with a 6786.0 kg d exposure are presented.
Abstract: We present the results of a search for dark matter weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) in the mass range below 20 GeV/c2 using a target of low-radioactivity argon with a 6786.0 kg d exposure. The data were obtained using the DarkSide-50 apparatus at Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso. The analysis is based on the ionization signal, for which the DarkSide-50 time projection chamber is fully efficient at 0.1 keVee. The observed rate in the detector at 0.5 keVee is about 1.5 event/keVee/kg/d and is almost entirely accounted for by known background sources. We obtain a 90% C.L. exclusion limit above 1.8 GeV/c2 for the spin-independent cross section of dark matter WIMPs on nucleons, extending the exclusion region for dark matter below previous limits in the range 1.8–6 GeV/c2.

417 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1988-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, the first hydrothermal fluid samples collected along the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) are remarkably similar in composition and temperature to fluids collected on the East Pacific Rise (EPR), and they appear to be in equilibrium with a greenschist-facies mineral assemblage.
Abstract: The first hydrothermal fluid samples collected along the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) are remarkably similar in composition and temperature to fluids collected along the shallower, faster-spreading East Pacific Rise (EPR). The MAR fluids, like those from the EPR, appear to be in equilibrium with a greenschist-facies mineral assemblage. In contrast to the EPR, the more fractured nature of the MAR apparently allows fluids at one of the MAR sites to interact with weathered basalt.

416 citations


Authors

Showing all 23345 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Matthew Meyerson194553243726
Gad Getz189520247560
Eric Boerwinkle1831321170971
Pulickel M. Ajayan1761223136241
Zhenan Bao169865106571
Marc Weber1672716153502
Steven N. Blair165879132929
Martin Karplus163831138492
Dongyuan Zhao160872106451
Xiang Zhang1541733117576
Jan-Åke Gustafsson147105898804
James M. Tour14385991364
Guanrong Chen141165292218
Naomi J. Halas14043582040
Antonios G. Mikos13869470204
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023111
2022440
20213,031
20203,072
20192,806
20182,568