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Institution

University of Konstanz

EducationKonstanz, 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
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study confirms previous findings that, if left untreated, PTSD in children may persist for an extended period, but shows that it is possible to effectively treat chronic PTSD and restore functioning in traumatized refugee children in only 8 treatment sessions.
Abstract: The authors examined the effectiveness of narrative exposure therapy for children (KIDNET) in treating posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in refugee children living in exile. Twenty-six children traumatized by organized violence were randomly assigned to KIDNET or to a waiting list. Significant treatment by time interactions on all PTSD-relevant variables indicated that the KIDNET group, but not the controls, showed a clinically significant improvement in symptoms and functioning. Success of the KIDNET group remained stable at 12-month follow-up. This study confirms previous findings that, if left untreated, PTSD in children may persist for an extended period. However, it also shows that it is possible to effectively treat chronic PTSD and restore functioning in traumatized refugee children in only 8 treatment sessions.

198 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The differences in the scalp topographies between blinks and vertical saccades can be explained by the different ways in which they are generated, including changes in the orientation of the corneoretinal dipole.

198 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that dopaminergic neurons expressing the OAMB octopamine receptor specifically convey the short-term reinforcing effects of sweet taste, suggesting that short- term and long-term sugar memories have different physiological constraints.

198 citations

Book ChapterDOI
09 Sep 2003
TL;DR: This text proposes a local change to the database kernel, the staircase join, which encapsulates the necessary tree knowledge needed to improve XPath performance and reports on quite promising experiments with a staircase join enhanced main-memory database kernel.
Abstract: Relational query processors derive much of their effectiveness from the awareness of specific table properties like sort order, size, or absence of duplicate tuples. This text applies (and adapts) this successful principle to database-supported XML and XPath processing: the relational system is made tree aware, i.e., tree properties like subtree size, intersection of paths, inclusion or disjointness of subtrees are made explicit. We propose a local change to the database kernel, the staircase join, which encapsulates the necessary tree knowledge needed to improve XPath performance. Staircase join operates on an XML encoding which makes this knowledge available at the cost of simple integer operations (e.g., +, ≤ ). We finally report on quite promising experiments with a staircase join enhanced main-memory database kernel.

197 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of ultrathin sections from isolated bovine chromaffin cells grown on plastic support, after fast freezing, by quantitative electron microscopy determined the size and intracellular distribution of dense core vesicles (DVs or Chromaffin granules) and of clear vesicle (CVs) and found that DVs appear randomly packed inside cells.
Abstract: We have analyzed ultrathin sections from isolated bovine chromaffin cells grown on plastic support, after fast freezing, by quantitative electron microscopy. We determined the size and intracellular distribution of dense core vesicles (DVs or chromaffin granules) and of clear vesicles (CVs). The average diameter of DVs is 356 nm, and that of CVs varies between 35-195 nm (average 90 nm). DVs appear randomly packed inside cells. When the distance of the center of DVs to the cell membrane (CM) is analyzed, DV density is found to decrease as the CM is approached. According to Monte Carlo simulations performed on the basis of the measured size distribution of DVs, this decay can be assigned to a "wall effect." Any cortical barrier, regardless of its function, seems to not impose a restriction to a random cortical DV packing pattern. The number of DVs closely approaching the CM (docked DVs) is estimated to be between 364 and 629 (average 496), i.e., 0.45 to 0.78 DVs/micron2 CM. Deprivation of Ca2+, priming by increasing [Ca2+]i, or depolarization by high [K+]e for 10 s (the effect of which was controlled electrophysiologically and predicted to change the number of readily releasable granules [RRGs]) does not significantly change the number of peripheral DVs. The reason may be that (a) structural docking implies only in part functional docking (capability of immediate release), and (b) exocytosis is rapidly followed by endocytosis and replenishment of the pool of docked DVs. Whereas the potential contribution of DVs to CM area increase by immediate release can be estimated at 19-33%, that of CVs is expected to be in the range of 5.6-8.0%.

197 citations


Authors

Showing all 12272 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert E. W. Hancock15277588481
Lloyd J. Old152775101377
Andrew White1491494113874
Stefanie Dimmeler14757481658
Rudolf Amann14345985525
Niels Birbaumer14283577853
Thomas P. Russell141101280055
Emmanuelle Perez138155099016
Shlomo Havlin131101383347
Bruno S. Frey11990065368
Roald Hoffmann11687059470
Michael G. Fehlings116118957003
Yves Van de Peer11549461479
Axel Meyer11251151195
Manuela Campanelli11167548563
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202360
2022202
20211,361
20201,299
20191,166
20181,082