Institution
University of Konstanz
Education•Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany•
About: University of Konstanz is a education organization based out in Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Membrane. The organization has 12115 authors who have published 27401 publications receiving 951162 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Constance & Universität Konstanz.
Topics: Population, Membrane, Politics, Laser, Gene
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: It is shown that the water temperature rises to near the critical temperature and the water undergoes an explosive evaporation in the subnanosecond range, and the formation of vapor bubbles shows a threshold dependence on laser fluence.
Abstract: Intense nonequilibrium femtosecond laser excitation of gold nanoparticles in water leads to a transient heating of the nanoparticles, which decays via heat transfer to the water phase. It is shown that the water temperature rises to near the critical temperature and the water undergoes an explosive evaporation in the subnanosecond range. The formation of vapor bubbles shows a threshold dependence on laser fluence. The nascent nanoscale vapor bubbles change the heat dissipation drastically. The nanoscale structure is resolved directly with a combination of x-ray scattering methods sensitive to the particle lattice expansion and the change in the water structure factor.
251 citations
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TL;DR: Circumstantial evidence suggests that type IID fibers are identical with the 2X fibers, previously described by Schiaffino et al. (1986).
Abstract: Combined histochemical and biochemical analyses were performed on rat skeletal muscles in order to determine the myosin heavy chain patterns in specific fiber types. Four myosin heavy chain isoforms were separated by gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of extracts from single fibers and whole muscle homogenates. Their electrophoretic mobility increased in the order HCIIa, HCIIb, and HCI. HCIIa, HCIIb and HCI were present as unique isoforms in histochemically defined fiber types IIA, IIB and I, respectively. The isoforms HCI and HCIIa coexisted at variable ratios in type IC and IIC fibers. An additional fast myosin heavy chain isoform with an electrophoretic mobility between HCIIa and HCIIb was designated as HCIId because of its abundance in fast fibers of large diameter in the diaphragm. With the exception of slight differences in mATPase staining intensity after acid preincubation, these fibers were almost indistinguishable from type IIB fibers. In view of their specific myosin heavy chain composition (HCIId), these fibers were named type IID. In the extensor digitorum longus muscle, type IID fibers were of smaller size than type IIB and differed from the latter by higher NADH tetrazolium reductase activities. Circumstantial evidence suggests that type IID fibers are identical with the 2X fibers, previously described by Schiaffino et al. (1986).
251 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that NADH rather than NAD is the preferred substrate, and it is found that S-nitrosylation of GAPDH is responsible for reversible enzyme inhibition, whereas attachment of NADH accounts for irreversible enzyme inactivation.
250 citations
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University of Fribourg1, Stellenbosch University2, University College London3, Zoological Society of London4, University of Lisbon5, Durham University6, University of Vienna7, International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources8, Lincoln University (New Zealand)9, University of Konstanz10, Taizhou University11, Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg12, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ13, Free University of Berlin14, Leibniz Association15, United States Forest Service16, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague17, Newcastle University18, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic19, Charles University in Prague20
TL;DR: These projections are the first quantitative projections of future trajectories of alien species numbers for seven major taxonomic groups in eight continents, accounting for variation in sampling intensity and uncertainty in projections.
Abstract: Biological invasions have steadily increased over recent centuries. However, we still lack a clear expectation about future trends in alien species numbers. In particular, we do not know whether alien species will continue to accumulate in regional floras and faunas, or whether the pace of accumulation will decrease due to the depletion of native source pools. Here, we apply a new model to simulate future numbers of alien species based on estimated sizes of source pools and dynamics of historical invasions, assuming a continuation of processes in the future as observed in the past (a business-as-usual scenario). We first validated performance of different model versions by conducting a back-casting approach, therefore fitting the model to alien species numbers until 1950 and validating predictions on trends from 1950 to 2005. In a second step, we selected the best performing model that provided the most robust predictions to project trajectories of alien species numbers until 2050. Altogether, this resulted in 3,790 stochastic simulation runs for 38 taxon-continent combinations. We provide the first quantitative projections of future trajectories of alien species numbers for seven major taxonomic groups in eight continents, accounting for variation in sampling intensity and uncertainty in projections. Overall, established alien species numbers per continent were predicted to increase from 2005 to 2050 by 36%. Particularly, strong increases were projected for Europe in absolute (+2,543 ± 237 alien species) and relative terms, followed by Temperate Asia (+1,597 ± 197), Northern America (1,484 ± 74) and Southern America (1,391 ± 258). Among individual taxonomic groups, especially strong increases were projected for invertebrates globally. Declining (but still positive) rates were projected only for Australasia. Our projections provide a first baseline for the assessment of future developments of biological invasions, which will help to inform policies to contain the spread of alien species.
250 citations
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TL;DR: Evidence supports the use of a covariance matrix, Kaiser normalization, and Promax rotation for principal components analysis to event-related potential (ERP) datasets and results suggest that optimized PCA procedures can measurably improve source localization results.
249 citations
Authors
Showing all 12272 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Robert E. W. Hancock | 152 | 775 | 88481 |
Lloyd J. Old | 152 | 775 | 101377 |
Andrew White | 149 | 1494 | 113874 |
Stefanie Dimmeler | 147 | 574 | 81658 |
Rudolf Amann | 143 | 459 | 85525 |
Niels Birbaumer | 142 | 835 | 77853 |
Thomas P. Russell | 141 | 1012 | 80055 |
Emmanuelle Perez | 138 | 1550 | 99016 |
Shlomo Havlin | 131 | 1013 | 83347 |
Bruno S. Frey | 119 | 900 | 65368 |
Roald Hoffmann | 116 | 870 | 59470 |
Michael G. Fehlings | 116 | 1189 | 57003 |
Yves Van de Peer | 115 | 494 | 61479 |
Axel Meyer | 112 | 511 | 51195 |
Manuela Campanelli | 111 | 675 | 48563 |