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Institution

University of Lausanne

EducationLausanne, Switzerland
About: University of Lausanne is a education organization based out in Lausanne, Switzerland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 20508 authors who have published 46458 publications receiving 1996655 citations. The organization is also known as: Université de Lausanne & UNIL.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A design science approach is proposed to bridge practice to theory, not vice versa, theory to practice, to make novel theoretical insights and practical relevance complementary in operations management research.
Abstract: Despite ambitious efforts in various fields of research over multiple decades, the goal of making academic research relevant to the practitioner remains elusive: theoretical and academic research interests do not seem to coincide with the interests of managerial practice. This challenge is more fundamental than knowledge transfer, it is one of diverging knowledge interests and means of knowledge production. In this article, we look at this fundamental challenge through the lens of design science, which is an approach aimed primarily at discovery and problem solving as opposed to accumulation of theoretical knowledge. We explore in particular the ways in which problem-solving research and theory-oriented academic research can complement one another. In operations management (OM) research, recognizing and building on this complementarity is especially crucial, because problem-solving–oriented research produces the very artifacts (e.g., technologies) that empirical OM research subsequently evaluates in an attempt to build explanatory theory. It is indeed the practitioner—not the academic scientist—who engages in basic research in OM. This idiosyncrasy prompts the question: how can we enhance the cross-fertilization between academic research and research practice to make novel theoretical insights and practical relevance complementary? This article proposes a design science approach to bridge practice to theory rather than theory to practice.

528 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used tree-ring chronologies from the Russian Altai and European Alps to reconstruct summer temperatures over the past two millennia and found an unprecedented, longlasting and spatially synchronized cooling following a cluster of large volcanic eruptions in 536, 540 and 547 AD.
Abstract: Societal upheaval occurred across Eurasia in the sixth and seventh centuries. Tree-ring reconstructions suggest a period of pronounced cooling during this time associated with several volcanic eruptions. Climatic changes during the first half of the Common Era have been suggested to play a role in societal reorganizations in Europe1,2 and Asia3,4. In particular, the sixth century coincides with rising and falling civilizations1,2,3,4,5,6, pandemics7,8, human migration and political turmoil8,9,10,11,12,13. Our understanding of the magnitude and spatial extent as well as the possible causes and concurrences of climate change during this period is, however, still limited. Here we use tree-ring chronologies from the Russian Altai and European Alps to reconstruct summer temperatures over the past two millennia. We find an unprecedented, long-lasting and spatially synchronized cooling following a cluster of large volcanic eruptions in 536, 540 and 547 AD (ref. 14), which was probably sustained by ocean and sea-ice feedbacks15,16, as well as a solar minimum17. We thus identify the interval from 536 to about 660 AD as the Late Antique Little Ice Age. Spanning most of the Northern Hemisphere, we suggest that this cold phase be considered as an additional environmental factor contributing to the establishment of the Justinian plague7,8, transformation of the eastern Roman Empire and collapse of the Sasanian Empire1,2,5, movements out of the Asian steppe and Arabian Peninsula8,11,12, spread of Slavic-speaking peoples9,10 and political upheavals in China13.

527 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article showed that, despite projected reductions in tropical cyclone frequency, projected increases in demographic pressure and tropical cyclones intensity can be expected to exacerbate disaster risk, even with reported losses.
Abstract: Assessments of tropical cyclone risk trends are typically based on reported losses, which are biased by improvements in information access. Now research based on thousands of physically observed events and contextual factors shows that, despite projected reductions in tropical cyclone frequency, projected increases in demographic pressure and tropical cyclone intensity can be expected to exacerbate disaster risk.

526 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope was used to study the electron scattering of isolated Ce adatoms on Ag(111) surfaces, and the dip spectrum was interpreted as a Fano interference for the limit where the $f$ orbital has a very small matrix element.
Abstract: Electron scattering of isolated Ce adatoms on Ag(111) surfaces was studied with a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope. Tunneling spectra obtained on and near Ce reveal a characteristic dip around the Fermi energy which is absent for nonmagnetic Ag adatoms. This feature is detected over a few atomic diameters around Ce atoms at the surface. The transition matrix element from the localized $f$ electron to the tunnel-current carrying continuum states bears a strong resemblance to discrete autoionized states. We interpret the dip spectrum as a Fano interference for the limit where the $f$ orbital has a very small matrix element.

525 citations


Authors

Showing all 20911 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Peer Bork206697245427
Aaron R. Folsom1811118134044
Kari Alitalo174817114231
Ralph A. DeFronzo160759132993
Johan Auwerx15865395779
Silvia Franceschi1551340112504
Matthias Egger152901184176
Bart Staels15282486638
Fernando Rivadeneira14662886582
Christopher George Tully1421843111669
Richard S. J. Frackowiak142309100726
Peter Timothy Cox140126795584
Jürg Tschopp14032886900
Stylianos E. Antonarakis13874693605
Michael Weller134110591874
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023249
2022635
20213,970
20203,508
20193,091
20182,776