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Institution

University of Jyväskylä

EducationJyvaskyla, Finland
About: University of Jyväskylä is a education organization based out in Jyvaskyla, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Neutron. The organization has 8066 authors who have published 25168 publications receiving 725033 citations. The organization is also known as: Jyväskylän yliopisto & Kasvatusopillinen korkeakoulu.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
A. Bandyopadhyay1, Sandhya Choubey1, Raj Gandhi1, Srubabati Goswami1, B.L. Roberts2, J. Bouchez, I. Antoniadis3, John Ellis3, Gian F. Giudice3, T. Schwetz3, S. Umasankar, G. Karagiorgi4, Alexis A. Aguilar-Arevalo4, Janet Conrad4, M. H. Shaevitz4, Silvia Pascoli5, S. Geer6, J.E. Campagne7, Mark Rolinec8, A. Blondel9, Manuela Campanelli9, Joachim Kopp10, Manfred Lindner10, J.T. Peltoniemi, P. J. Dornan11, Kenneth Long11, Takashi Matsushita11, C. Rogers11, Y. Uchida11, Marcos Dracos, K. Whisnant12, David William Casper13, Mingshui Chen13, B. A. Popov14, Juha Äystö15, Danny Marfatia16, Y. Okada17, H. Sugiyama17, Klaus-Peter Jungmann18, Julien Lesgourgues, Michael S. Zisman19, Mariam Tórtola20, Alexander Friedland21, Sacha Davidson22, Stefan Antusch23, C. Biggio23, Andrea Donini23, Enrique Fernandez-Martinez23, Belen Gavela23, Michele Maltoni23, Jacobo Lopez-Pavon23, Stefano Rigolin23, N. K. Mondal24, V. Palladino, Frank Filthaut, Carl H. Albright25, A. de Gouvea26, Yoshitaka Kuno27, Y. Nagashima27, M. Mezzetto, S. Lola28, Paul Langacker29, A. Baldini, Hiroshi Nunokawa30, Davide Meloni31, Michel Diaz32, Stephen F. King33, Kai Zuber34, A.G. Akeroyd35, Y. Grossman36, Yasaman Farzan, Kazuhiro Tobe37, Mayumi Aoki38, Hitoshi Murayama39, Hitoshi Murayama19, Hitoshi Murayama40, N. Kitazawa41, Osamu Yasuda41, S.T. Petcov42, Andrea Romanino42, P. Chimenti43, Andrea Vacchi43, A. Yu. Smirnov44, Elena Couce45, J.J. Gómez-Cadenas45, Pilar Hernández45, M. Sorel45, José W. F. Valle45, Paul Fraser Harrison46, Cecilia Lunardini47, J.K. Nelson48, Vernon Barger49, Lisa L. Everett49, Patrick Huber49, Walter Winter50, W. Fetscher51, A. van der Schaaf52 
Harish-Chandra Research Institute1, Boston University2, CERN3, Columbia University4, Durham University5, Fermilab6, University of Paris-Sud7, Technische Universität München8, University of Geneva9, Max Planck Society10, Imperial College London11, Iowa State University12, University of California, Irvine13, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research14, University of Jyväskylä15, University of Kansas16, KEK17, University of Groningen18, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory19, Instituto Superior Técnico20, Los Alamos National Laboratory21, Lyon College22, Autonomous University of Madrid23, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research24, Northern Illinois University25, Northwestern University26, Osaka University27, University of Patras28, University of Pennsylvania29, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro30, Sapienza University of Rome31, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile32, University of Southampton33, University of Sussex34, National Cheng Kung University35, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology36, Tohoku University37, University of Tokyo38, Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe39, University of California, Berkeley40, Tokyo Metropolitan University41, International School for Advanced Studies42, University of Trieste43, International Centre for Theoretical Physics44, Spanish National Research Council45, University of Warwick46, University of Washington47, College of William & Mary48, University of Wisconsin-Madison49, University of Würzburg50, ETH Zurich51, University of Zurich52
TL;DR: The conclusions of the Physics Working Group of the International Scoping Study of a future Neutrino Factory and super-beam facility (the ISS) are presented in this article.
Abstract: The conclusions of the Physics Working Group of the International Scoping Study of a future Neutrino Factory and super-beam facility (the ISS) are presented. The ISS was carried out by the international community between NuFact05, (the 7th International Workshop on Neutrino Factories and Super-beams, Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati, Rome, 21–26 June 2005) and NuFact06 (Ivine, CA, 24–30 August 2006). The physics case for an extensive experimental programme to understand the properties of the neutrino is presented and the role of high-precision measurements of neutrino oscillations within this programme is discussed in detail. The performance of second-generation super-beam experiments, beta-beam facilities and the Neutrino Factory are evaluated and a quantitative comparison of the discovery potential of the three classes of facility is presented. High-precision studies of the properties of the muon are complementary to the study of neutrino oscillations. The Neutrino Factory has the potential to provide extremely intense muon beams and the physics potential of such beams is discussed in the final section of the report.

290 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
20 Apr 2002
TL;DR: The use of gesture and non-speech audio as ways to improve the user interface of a mobile music player are discussed, showing significant usability improvements for the gesture/audio-based interface over a standard visual/pen-based display.
Abstract: This paper discusses the use of gesture and non-speech audio as ways to improve the user interface of a mobile music player. Their key advantages mean that users could use a player without having to look at its controls when on the move. Two very different evaluations of the player took place: one based on a standard usability experiment (comparing the new player to a standard design) and the other a video analysis of the player in use. Both of these showed significant usability improvements for the gesture/audio-based interface over a standard visual/pen-based display. The similarities and differences in the results produced by the two studies are discussed

290 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 May 2000-Nature
TL;DR: Here it is found experimentally that the lowest three states in the energy spectrum of the neutron deficient nucleus 186Pb are spherical, oblate and prolate, which is an apparently unique shape triplet.
Abstract: Understanding the fundamental excitations of many-fermion systems is of significant current interest. In atomic nuclei with even numbers of neutrons and protons, the low-lying excitation spectrum is generally formed by nucleon pair breaking and nuclear vibrations or rotations. However, for certain numbers of protons and neutrons, a subtle rearrangement of only a few nucleons among the orbitals at the Fermi surface can result in a different elementary mode: a macroscopic shape change. The first experimental evidence for this phenomenon came from the observation of shape coexistence in 16O (ref. 4). Other unexpected examples came with the discovery of fission isomers and super-deformed nuclei. Here we find experimentally that the lowest three states in the energy spectrum of the neutron deficient nucleus 186Pb are spherical, oblate and prolate. The states are populated by the alpha-decay of a parent nucleus; to identify them, we combine knowledge of the particular features of this decay with sensitive measurement techniques (a highly efficient velocity filters with strong background reduction, and an extremely selective recoil-alpha-electron coincidence tagging methods). The existence of this apparently unique shape triplet is permitted only by the specific conditions that are met around this particular nucleus.

289 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that collagen-dependent induction of MMP-13 in dermal fibroblasts requires p38 activity, and is inhibited by activation of ERK1,2, suggesting that p38 MAPK may serve as a target for selective inhibition of collagen degradation, e.g. in chronic dermal ulcers.

288 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
08 May 2014-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, crystal and solution structures of the resting and activated states of the photosensory core of the bacteriophytochrome from Deinococcus radiodurans were reported.
Abstract: Sensory proteins must relay structural signals from the sensory site over large distances to regulatory output domains. Phytochromes are a major family of red-light-sensing kinases that control diverse cellular functions in plants, bacteria and fungi. Bacterial phytochromes consist of a photosensory core and a carboxy-terminal regulatory domain. Structures of photosensory cores are reported in the resting state and conformational responses to light activation have been proposed in the vicinity of the chromophore. However, the structure of the signalling state and the mechanism of downstream signal relay through the photosensory core remain elusive. Here we report crystal and solution structures of the resting and activated states of the photosensory core of the bacteriophytochrome from Deinococcus radiodurans. The structures show an open and closed form of the dimeric protein for the activated and resting states, respectively. This nanometre-scale rearrangement is controlled by refolding of an evolutionarily conserved 'tongue', which is in contact with the chromophore. The findings reveal an unusual mechanism in which atomic-scale conformational changes around the chromophore are first amplified into an angstrom-scale distance change in the tongue, and further grow into a nanometre-scale conformational signal. The structural mechanism is a blueprint for understanding how phytochromes connect to the cellular signalling network.

288 citations


Authors

Showing all 8239 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Brenda W.J.H. Penninx1701139119082
Mika Kivimäki1661515141468
Jaakko Kaprio1631532126320
Marvin Johnson1491827119520
Stanislas Dehaene14945686539
Roger Jones138998114061
Zubayer Ahammed12991259811
James Alexander12988675096
Matti J Kortelainen128118680603
Madan M. Aggarwal12488356065
Joakim Nystrand11765850146
Robert U. Newton10975342527
Dieter Røhrich10263735942
Keijo Häkkinen9942131355
Dong Jo Kim9849736272
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202390
2022286
20211,666
20201,684
20191,506