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Showing papers by "University of Ljubljana published in 2017"


Journal ArticleDOI
Bin Zhou1, James Bentham1, Mariachiara Di Cesare2, Honor Bixby1  +787 moreInstitutions (231)
TL;DR: The number of adults with raised blood pressure increased from 594 million in 1975 to 1·13 billion in 2015, with the increase largely in low-income and middle-income countries, and the contributions of changes in prevalence versus population growth and ageing to the increase.

1,573 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that both ecosystems and society should be prepared for an increasingly disturbed future of forests, as warmer and drier conditions particularly facilitate fire, drought and insect disturbances, while warmer and wetter conditions increase disturbances from wind and pathogens.
Abstract: Forest disturbances are sensitive to climate. However, our understanding of disturbance dynamics in response to climatic changes remains incomplete, particularly regarding large-scale patterns, interaction effects and dampening feedbacks. Here we provide a global synthesis of climate change effects on important abiotic (fire, drought, wind, snow and ice) and biotic (insects and pathogens) disturbance agents. Warmer and drier conditions particularly facilitate fire, drought and insect disturbances, while warmer and wetter conditions increase disturbances from wind and pathogens. Widespread interactions between agents are likely to amplify disturbances, while indirect climate effects such as vegetation changes can dampen long-term disturbance sensitivities to climate. Future changes in disturbance are likely to be most pronounced in coniferous forests and the boreal biome. We conclude that both ecosystems and society should be prepared for an increasingly disturbed future of forests.

1,388 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Andrew I R Maas1, David K. Menon2, P. David Adelson3, Nada Andelic4  +339 moreInstitutions (110)
TL;DR: The InTBIR Participants and Investigators have provided informed consent for the study to take place in Poland.
Abstract: Additional co-authors: Endre Czeiter, Marek Czosnyka, Ramon Diaz-Arrastia, Jens P Dreier, Ann-Christine Duhaime, Ari Ercole, Thomas A van Essen, Valery L Feigin, Guoyi Gao, Joseph Giacino, Laura E Gonzalez-Lara, Russell L Gruen, Deepak Gupta, Jed A Hartings, Sean Hill, Ji-yao Jiang, Naomi Ketharanathan, Erwin J O Kompanje, Linda Lanyon, Steven Laureys, Fiona Lecky, Harvey Levin, Hester F Lingsma, Marc Maegele, Marek Majdan, Geoffrey Manley, Jill Marsteller, Luciana Mascia, Charles McFadyen, Stefania Mondello, Virginia Newcombe, Aarno Palotie, Paul M Parizel, Wilco Peul, James Piercy, Suzanne Polinder, Louis Puybasset, Todd E Rasmussen, Rolf Rossaint, Peter Smielewski, Jeannette Soderberg, Simon J Stanworth, Murray B Stein, Nicole von Steinbuchel, William Stewart, Ewout W Steyerberg, Nino Stocchetti, Anneliese Synnot, Braden Te Ao, Olli Tenovuo, Alice Theadom, Dick Tibboel, Walter Videtta, Kevin K W Wang, W Huw Williams, Kristine Yaffe for the InTBIR Participants and Investigators

1,354 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
21 Jul 2017
TL;DR: The channel and spatial reliability concepts are introduced to DCF tracking and a novel learning algorithm is provided for its efficient and seamless integration in the filter update and the tracking process.
Abstract: Short-term tracking is an open and challenging problem for which discriminative correlation filters (DCF) have shown excellent performance. We introduce the channel and spatial reliability concepts to DCF tracking and provide a novel learning algorithm for its efficient and seamless integration in the filter update and the tracking process. The spatial reliability map adjusts the filter support to the part of the object suitable for tracking. This allows tracking of non-rectangular objects as well as extending the search region. Channel reliability reflects the quality of the learned filter and it is used as a feature weighting coefficient in localization. Experimentally, with only two simple standard features, HOGs and Colornames, the novel CSR-DCF method – DCF with Channel and Spatial Reliability – achieves state-of-the-art results on VOT 2016, VOT 2015 and OTB. The CSR-DCF runs in real-time on a CPU.

941 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
11 Aug 2017-Science
TL;DR: Analysis of the timing of river floods in Europe over the past 50 years found clear patterns of changes in flood timing that can be ascribed to climate effects, and highlights the existence of a clear climate signal in flood observations at the continental scale.
Abstract: A warming climate is expected to have an impact on the magnitude and timing of river floods; however, no consistent large-scale climate change signal in observed flood magnitudes has been identified so far. We analyzed the timing of river floods in Europe over the past five decades, using a pan-European database from 4262 observational hydrometric stations, and found clear patterns of change in flood timing. Warmer temperatures have led to earlier spring snowmelt floods throughout northeastern Europe; delayed winter storms associated with polar warming have led to later winter floods around the North Sea and some sectors of the Mediterranean coast; and earlier soil moisture maxima have led to earlier winter floods in western Europe. Our results highlight the existence of a clear climate signal in flood observations at the continental scale.

557 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report world averages of measurements of b-hadron, c-, c-, and tau-lepton properties obtained by the Heavy Flavor Averaging Group (HFAG) using results available through the end of 2011.
Abstract: This article reports world averages of measurements of b-hadron, c-hadron, and tau-lepton properties obtained by the Heavy Flavor Averaging Group (HFAG) using results available through the end of 2011. In some cases results available in the early part of 2012 are included. For the averaging, common input parameters used in the various analyses are adjusted (rescaled) to common values, and known correlations are taken into account. The averages include branching fractions, lifetimes, neutral meson mixing parameters, CP violation parameters, parameters of semileptonic decays and CKM matrix elements.

554 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Morad Aaboud, Georges Aad1, Brad Abbott2, Jalal Abdallah3  +2845 moreInstitutions (197)
TL;DR: This paper presents a short overview of the changes to the trigger and data acquisition systems during the first long shutdown of the LHC and shows the performance of the trigger system and its components based on the 2015 proton–proton collision data.
Abstract: During 2015 the ATLAS experiment recorded 3.8 fb(-1) of proton-proton collision data at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. The ATLAS trigger system is a crucial component of the experiment, respons ...

488 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
Matej Kristan1, Ales Leonardis2, Jiri Matas3, Michael Felsberg4, Roman Pflugfelder5, Luka Čehovin Zajc1, Tomas Vojir3, Gustav Häger4, Alan Lukezic1, Abdelrahman Eldesokey4, Gustavo Fernandez5, Alvaro Garcia-Martin6, Andrej Muhič1, Alfredo Petrosino7, Alireza Memarmoghadam8, Andrea Vedaldi9, Antoine Manzanera10, Antoine Tran10, A. Aydin Alatan11, Bogdan Mocanu, Boyu Chen12, Chang Huang, Changsheng Xu13, Chong Sun12, Dalong Du, David Zhang, Dawei Du13, Deepak Mishra, Erhan Gundogdu14, Erhan Gundogdu11, Erik Velasco-Salido, Fahad Shahbaz Khan4, Francesco Battistone, Gorthi R. K. Sai Subrahmanyam, Goutam Bhat4, Guan Huang, Guilherme Sousa Bastos, Guna Seetharaman15, Hongliang Zhang16, Houqiang Li17, Huchuan Lu12, Isabela Drummond, Jack Valmadre9, Jae-chan Jeong18, Jaeil Cho18, Jae-Yeong Lee18, Jana Noskova, Jianke Zhu19, Jin Gao13, Jingyu Liu13, Ji-Wan Kim18, João F. Henriques9, José M. Martínez, Junfei Zhuang20, Junliang Xing13, Junyu Gao13, Kai Chen21, Kannappan Palaniappan22, Karel Lebeda, Ke Gao22, Kris M. Kitani23, Lei Zhang, Lijun Wang12, Lingxiao Yang, Longyin Wen24, Luca Bertinetto9, Mahdieh Poostchi22, Martin Danelljan4, Matthias Mueller25, Mengdan Zhang13, Ming-Hsuan Yang26, Nianhao Xie16, Ning Wang17, Ondrej Miksik9, Payman Moallem8, Pallavi Venugopal M, Pedro Senna, Philip H. S. Torr9, Qiang Wang13, Qifeng Yu16, Qingming Huang13, Rafael Martin-Nieto, Richard Bowden27, Risheng Liu12, Ruxandra Tapu, Simon Hadfield27, Siwei Lyu28, Stuart Golodetz9, Sunglok Choi18, Tianzhu Zhang13, Titus Zaharia, Vincenzo Santopietro, Wei Zou13, Weiming Hu13, Wenbing Tao21, Wenbo Li28, Wengang Zhou17, Xianguo Yu16, Xiao Bian24, Yang Li19, Yifan Xing23, Yingruo Fan20, Zheng Zhu13, Zhipeng Zhang13, Zhiqun He20 
01 Jul 2017
TL;DR: The Visual Object Tracking challenge VOT2017 is the fifth annual tracker benchmarking activity organized by the VOT initiative; results of 51 trackers are presented; many are state-of-the-art published at major computer vision conferences or journals in recent years.
Abstract: The Visual Object Tracking challenge VOT2017 is the fifth annual tracker benchmarking activity organized by the VOT initiative. Results of 51 trackers are presented; many are state-of-the-art published at major computer vision conferences or journals in recent years. The evaluation included the standard VOT and other popular methodologies and a new "real-time" experiment simulating a situation where a tracker processes images as if provided by a continuously running sensor. Performance of the tested trackers typically by far exceeds standard baselines. The source code for most of the trackers is publicly available from the VOT page. The VOT2017 goes beyond its predecessors by (i) improving the VOT public dataset and introducing a separate VOT2017 sequestered dataset, (ii) introducing a realtime tracking experiment and (iii) releasing a redesigned toolkit that supports complex experiments. The dataset, the evaluation kit and the results are publicly available at the challenge website1.

485 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Georges Aad1, Alexander Kupco2, P. Davison3, Samuel Webb4  +2888 moreInstitutions (192)
TL;DR: Topological cell clustering is established as a well-performing calorimeter signal definition for jet and missing transverse momentum reconstruction in ATLAS and is exploited to apply a local energy calibration and corrections depending on the nature of the cluster.
Abstract: The reconstruction of the signal from hadrons and jets emerging from the proton–proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and entering the ATLAS calorimeters is based on a three-dimensional topological clustering of individual calorimeter cell signals. The cluster formation follows cell signal-significance patterns generated by electromagnetic and hadronic showers. In this, the clustering algorithm implicitly performs a topological noise suppression by removing cells with insignificant signals which are not in close proximity to cells with significant signals. The resulting topological cell clusters have shape and location information, which is exploited to apply a local energy calibration and corrections depending on the nature of the cluster. Topological cell clustering is established as a well-performing calorimeter signal definition for jet and missing transverse momentum reconstruction in ATLAS.

438 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Maxime Cailleret1, Steven Jansen2, Elisabeth M. R. Robert3, Elisabeth M. R. Robert4, Lucía DeSoto5, Tuomas Aakala6, Joseph A. Antos7, Barbara Beikircher8, Christof Bigler1, Harald Bugmann1, Marco Caccianiga9, Vojtěch Čada10, J. Julio Camarero11, Paolo Cherubini12, Hervé Cochard13, Marie R. Coyea14, Katarina Čufar15, Adrian J. Das16, Hendrik Davi13, Sylvain Delzon13, Michael Dorman17, Guillermo Gea-Izquierdo18, Sten Gillner19, Sten Gillner20, Laurel J. Haavik21, Laurel J. Haavik22, Henrik Hartmann23, Ana-Maria Hereş24, Kevin R. Hultine25, Pavel Janda10, Jeffrey M. Kane26, Vyacheslav I. Kharuk27, Thomas Kitzberger28, Thomas Kitzberger29, Tamir Klein30, Koen Kramer31, Frederic Lens32, Tom Levanič, Juan Carlos Linares Calderón33, Francisco Lloret34, Raquel Lobo-do-Vale35, Fabio Lombardi36, Rosana López Rodríguez37, Rosana López Rodríguez38, Harri Mäkinen, Stefan Mayr8, Ilona Mészáros39, Juha M. Metsaranta40, Francesco Minunno6, Walter Oberhuber8, Andreas Papadopoulos41, Mikko Peltoniemi, Any Mary Petritan12, Brigitte Rohner1, Brigitte Rohner12, Gabriel Sangüesa-Barreda11, Dimitrios Sarris42, Dimitrios Sarris43, Dimitrios Sarris44, Jeremy M. Smith45, Amanda B. Stan46, Frank J. Sterck31, Dejan Stojanović47, Maria Laura Suarez28, Miroslav Svoboda10, Roberto Tognetti48, José M. Torres-Ruiz13, Volodymyr Trotsiuk10, Ricardo Villalba28, Floor Vodde49, Alana R. Westwood50, Peter H. Wyckoff51, Nikolay Zafirov52, Jordi Martínez-Vilalta34 
ETH Zurich1, University of Ulm2, Royal Museum for Central Africa3, Vrije Universiteit Brussel4, University of Coimbra5, University of Helsinki6, University of Victoria7, University of Innsbruck8, University of Milan9, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague10, Spanish National Research Council11, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research12, Institut national de la recherche agronomique13, Laval University14, University of Ljubljana15, United States Geological Survey16, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev17, Center for International Forestry Research18, Technical University of Berlin19, Dresden University of Technology20, University of Kansas21, University of Arkansas22, Max Planck Society23, National Museum of Natural History24, Desert Botanical Garden25, Humboldt State University26, Sukachev Institute of Forest27, National Scientific and Technical Research Council28, National University of Comahue29, Agricultural Research Organization, Volcani Center30, Wageningen University and Research Centre31, Naturalis32, Pablo de Olavide University33, Autonomous University of Barcelona34, University of Lisbon35, Mediterranean University36, Technical University of Madrid37, University of Western Sydney38, University of Debrecen39, Natural Resources Canada40, American Hotel & Lodging Educational Institute41, University of Cyprus42, Open University of Cyprus43, University of Patras44, University of Colorado Boulder45, Northern Arizona University46, University of Novi Sad47, European Forest Institute48, Estonian University of Life Sciences49, University of Alberta50, University of Minnesota51, University of Forestry, Sofia52
TL;DR: The results imply that growth-based mortality algorithms may be a powerful tool for predicting gymnosperm mortality induced by chronic stress, but not necessarily so for angiosperms and in case of intense drought or bark-beetle outbreaks.
Abstract: Tree mortality is a key factor influencing forest functions and dynamics, but our understanding of the mechanisms leading to mortality and the associated changes in tree growth rates are still limited. We compiled a new pan-conti- nental tree-ring width database from sites where both dead and living trees were sampled (2970 dead and 4224 living trees from 190 sites, including 36 species), and compared early and recent growth rates between trees that died and those that survived a given mortality event. We observed a decrease in radial growth before death in ca. 84% of the mortality events. The extent and duration of these reductions were highly variable (1–100 years in 96% of events) due to the complex interactions among study species and the source(s) of mortality. Strong and long-lasting declines were found for gymnosperms, shade- and drought-tolerant species, and trees that died from competition. Angiosperms and trees that died due to biotic attacks (especially bark-beetles) typically showed relatively small and short-term growth reductions. Our analysis did not highlight any universal trade-off between early growth and tree longevity within a species, although this result may also reflect high variability in sampling design among sites. The intersite and interspecific variability in growth patterns before mortality provides valuable information on the nature of the mortality process, which is consistent with our understanding of the physiological mechanisms leading to mortality. Abrupt changes in growth immediately before death can be associated with generalized hydraulic failure and/or bark-beetle attack, while long-term decrease in growth may be associated with a gradual decline in hydraulic performance coupled with depletion in carbon reserves. Our results imply that growth-based mortality algorithms may be a powerful tool for predicting gymnosperm mortality induced by chronic stress, but not necessarily so for angiosperms and in case of intense drought or bark-beetle outbreaks.

367 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Ronald P. de Vries1, Robert Riley2, Ad Wiebenga1, Guillermo Aguilar-Osorio3, Sotiris Amillis4, Cristiane Uchima, Gregor Anderluh, Mojtaba Asadollahi5, Marion Askin6, Marion Askin7, Kerrie Barry2, Evy Battaglia1, Özgür Bayram8, Özgür Bayram9, Tiziano Benocci1, Susanna A. Braus-Stromeyer8, Camila Caldana, David Cánovas10, David Cánovas11, Gustavo C. Cerqueira12, Fusheng Chen13, Wanping Chen13, Cindy Choi2, Alicia Clum2, Renato Augusto Corrêa dos Santos, André Damasio14, George Diallinas4, Tamás Emri5, Erzsébet Fekete5, Michel Flipphi5, Susanne Freyberg8, Antonia Gallo15, Christos Gournas16, Rob Habgood17, Matthieu Hainaut18, María Harispe19, Bernard Henrissat20, Bernard Henrissat18, Bernard Henrissat21, Kristiina Hildén22, Ryan Hope17, Abeer Hossain23, Eugenia Karabika24, Eugenia Karabika25, Levente Karaffa5, Zsolt Karányi5, Nada Kraševec, Alan Kuo2, Harald Kusch8, Kurt LaButti2, Ellen Lagendijk7, Alla Lapidus2, Alla Lapidus26, Anthony Levasseur18, Erika Lindquist2, Anna Lipzen2, Antonio F. Logrieco15, Andrew MacCabe27, Miia R. Mäkelä22, Iran Malavazi28, Petter Melin29, Vera Meyer30, Natalia Mielnichuk11, Natalia Mielnichuk31, Márton Miskei5, Ákos Molnár5, Giuseppina Mulè15, Chew Yee Ngan2, Margarita Orejas27, Erzsébet Orosz1, Erzsébet Orosz5, Jean Paul Ouedraogo7, Jean Paul Ouedraogo32, Karin M. Overkamp, Hee-Soo Park33, Giancarlo Perrone15, François Piumi18, François Piumi21, Peter J. Punt7, Arthur F. J. Ram7, Ana Ramón34, Stefan Rauscher35, Eric Record18, Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón, Vincent Robert1, Julian Röhrig35, Roberto Ruller, Asaf Salamov2, Nadhira Salih36, Nadhira Salih17, Rob Samson1, Erzsébet Sándor5, Manuel Sanguinetti34, Tabea Schütze7, Tabea Schütze30, Kristina Sepčić37, Ekaterina Shelest38, Gavin Sherlock39, Vicky Sophianopoulou, Fabio M. Squina, Hui Sun2, Antonia Susca15, Richard B. Todd40, Adrian Tsang32, Shiela E. Unkles24, Nathalie van de Wiele1, Diana van Rossen-Uffink7, Juliana Velasco de Castro Oliveira, Tammi Camilla Vesth41, Jaap Visser1, Jae-Hyuk Yu42, Miaomiao Zhou1, Mikael Rørdam Andersen41, David B. Archer17, Scott E. Baker43, Isabelle Benoit1, Isabelle Benoit32, Axel A. Brakhage44, Gerhard H. Braus8, Reinhard Fischer35, Jens Christian Frisvad41, Gustavo H. Goldman45, Jos Houbraken1, Berl R. Oakley46, István Pócsi5, Claudio Scazzocchio47, Claudio Scazzocchio48, Bernhard Seiboth49, Patricia A. vanKuyk7, Patricia A. vanKuyk1, Jennifer R. Wortman12, Paul S. Dyer17, Igor V. Grigoriev2 
Utrecht University1, United States Department of Energy2, National Autonomous University of Mexico3, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens4, University of Debrecen5, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation6, Leiden University7, University of Göttingen8, Maynooth University9, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna10, University of Seville11, Broad Institute12, Huazhong Agricultural University13, State University of Campinas14, International Sleep Products Association15, Université libre de Bruxelles16, University of Nottingham17, Aix-Marseille University18, Pasteur Institute19, King Abdulaziz University20, Institut national de la recherche agronomique21, University of Helsinki22, University of Amsterdam23, University of St Andrews24, University of Ioannina25, Saint Petersburg State University26, Spanish National Research Council27, Federal University of São Carlos28, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences29, Technical University of Berlin30, National Scientific and Technical Research Council31, Concordia University32, Kyungpook National University33, University of the Republic34, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology35, University of Sulaymaniyah36, University of Ljubljana37, Leibniz Association38, Stanford University39, Kansas State University40, Technical University of Denmark41, University of Wisconsin-Madison42, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory43, University of Jena44, University of São Paulo45, University of Kansas46, Université Paris-Saclay47, Imperial College London48, Vienna University of Technology49
TL;DR: In this article, a comparative genomics and experimental study of the aspergilli genus is presented, which allows for the first time a genus-wide view of the biological diversity of the Aspergillus and in many, but not all, cases linked genome differences to phenotype.
Abstract: Background: The fungal genus Aspergillus is of critical importance to humankind. Species include those with industrial applications, important pathogens of humans, animals and crops, a source of potent carcinogenic contaminants of food, and an important genetic model. The genome sequences of eight aspergilli have already been explored to investigate aspects of fungal biology, raising questions about evolution and specialization within this genus. Results: We have generated genome sequences for ten novel, highly diverse Aspergillus species and compared these in detail to sister and more distant genera. Comparative studies of key aspects of fungal biology, including primary and secondary metabolism, stress response, biomass degradation, and signal transduction, revealed both conservation and diversity among the species. Observed genomic differences were validated with experimental studies. This revealed several highlights, such as the potential for sex in asexual species, organic acid production genes being a key feature of black aspergilli, alternative approaches for degrading plant biomass, and indications for the genetic basis of stress response. A genome-wide phylogenetic analysis demonstrated in detail the relationship of the newly genome sequenced species with other aspergilli. Conclusions: Many aspects of biological differences between fungal species cannot be explained by current knowledge obtained from genome sequences. The comparative genomics and experimental study, presented here, allows for the first time a genus-wide view of the biological diversity of the aspergilli and in many, but not all, cases linked genome differences to phenotype. Insights gained could be exploited for biotechnological and medical applications of fungi.

Journal ArticleDOI
S. Wehle, C. Niebuhr, S. Yashchenko, Iki Adachi1  +239 moreInstitutions (64)
TL;DR: The result is consistent with standard model (SM) expectations, where the largest discrepancy from a SM prediction is observed in the muon modes with a local significance of 2.6σ.
Abstract: We present a measurement of angular observables and a test of lepton flavor universality in the B -> K(+)l(+)l(-) decay, where l is either e or mu. The analysis is performed on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 711 fb(-1) containing 772 x 10(6) B (B) over bar pairs, collected at the Upsilon(4S) resonance with the Belle detector at the asymmetric-energy e(+)e(-) collider KEKB. The result is consistent with standard model (SM) expectations, where the largest discrepancy from a SM prediction is observed in the muon modes with a local significance of 2.6 sigma.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of research done on this topic from one of the first mentions of diversity in 2001 until now is provided to offer a good overview to a researcher looking for the state-of-the-art on thistopic and to help a new developer get familiar with the topic.
Abstract: Diversification has become one of the leading topics of recommender system research not only as a way to solve the over-fitting problem but also an approach to increasing the quality of the users experience with the recommender system. This article aims to provide an overview of research done on this topic from one of the first mentions of diversity in 2001 until now. The articles ,and research, have been divided into three sub-topics for a better overview of the work done in the field of recommendation diversification: the definition and evaluation of diversity; the impact of diversification on the quality of recommendation results and the development of diversification algorithms themselves. In this way, the article aims both to offer a good overview to a researcher looking for the state-of-the-art on this topic and to help a new developer get familiar with the topic.

Journal ArticleDOI
Morad Aaboud, Alexander Kupco1, Peter Davison2, Samuel Webb3  +2944 moreInstitutions (220)
TL;DR: In this article, a search for new resonant and non-resonant high-mass phenomena in dielectron and dimuon fi nal states was conducted using 36 : 1 fb(-1) of proton-proton collision data.
Abstract: A search is conducted for new resonant and non-resonant high-mass phenomena in dielectron and dimuon fi nal states. The search uses 36 : 1 fb(-1) of proton-proton collision data, collected at root ...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that τ + τ − searches pose a serious challenge to NP explanations of the lepton flavor universality violation observed in semi-tauonic B meson decays with high p T tau leptons at the LHC.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review focuses on summarizing the perspectives of lncRNAs as biomarkers in cancer, based on evaluating their expression profiles determined in body fluids of cancer patients.
Abstract: Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are a relatively well-characterized class of noncoding RNA (ncRNA) molecules, involved in the regulation of various cell processes, including transcription, intracellular trafficking, and chromosome remodeling Their deregulation has been associated with the development and progression of various cancer types, the fact which makes them suitable as biomarkers for cancer diagnosis and prognosis In recent years, detection of cancer-associated lncRNAs in body fluids of cancer patients has proven itself as an especially valuable method to effectively diagnose cancer Cancer diagnosis and prognosis employing circulating lncRNAs are preferential when compared to classical biopsies of tumor tissues, especially due to their noninvasiveness, and have great potential for routine usage in clinical practice Thus, this review focuses on summarizing the perspectives of lncRNAs as biomarkers in cancer, based on evaluating their expression profiles determined in body fluids of cancer patients

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that blockchain provides solutions to many current problems in construction information management, but it is more likely that it will be built into generic IT infrastructure on top of which construction applications are built, rather than used directly by authors of construction related software.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work discusses how water’s orientation-dependent hydrogen bonding leads to open tetrahedral cage-like structuring that contributes to its remarkable volumetric and thermal properties.
Abstract: How are water’s material properties encoded within the structure of the water molecule? This is pertinent to understanding Earth’s living systems, its materials, its geochemistry and geophysics, and a broad spectrum of its industrial chemistry. Water has distinctive liquid and solid properties: It is highly cohesive. It has volumetric anomalies—water’s solid (ice) floats on its liquid; pressure can melt the solid rather than freezing the liquid; heating can shrink the liquid. It has more solid phases than other materials. Its supercooled liquid has divergent thermodynamic response functions. Its glassy state is neither fragile nor strong. Its component ions—hydroxide and protons—diffuse much faster than other ions. Aqueous solvation of ions or oils entails large entropies and heat capacities. We review how these properties are encoded within water’s molecular structure and energies, as understood from theories, simulations, and experiments. Like simpler liquids, water molecules are nearly spherical and in...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined whether the geographic proximity of information disseminated by the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak events combined with intense media coverage affected stock prices in the U.S. and found that the Ebola outbreak event effect is strongest for the stocks of companies with exposure of their operations to the West African countries (WAC) and the United States.

Journal ArticleDOI
Morad Aaboud, Georges Aad1, Brad Abbott2, Jalal Abdallah3  +2906 moreInstitutions (214)
TL;DR: In this paper, Dijet events are studied in the proton-proton collision dataset recorded at root s = 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider in 2015 and 2016.
Abstract: Dijet events are studied in the proton-proton collision dataset recorded at root s = 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider in 2015 and 2016, corresponding to integrated lumino ...

Journal ArticleDOI
08 May 2017
TL;DR: The relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and corporate financial performance (CFP) has been subject to extensive empirical enquiry as discussed by the authors, and the body of evidence that has accumulat...
Abstract: The relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and corporate financial performance (CFP) has been subject to extensive empirical enquiry. Yet the body of evidence that has accumulat...

Journal ArticleDOI
Javier Egea, Isabel Fabregat1, Yves Frapart2, Pietro Ghezzi3  +148 moreInstitutions (57)
TL;DR: The European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) provides an ideal framework to establish multi-disciplinary research networks and EU-ROS represents a consortium of researchers from different disciplines who are dedicated to providing new insights and tools for better understanding redox biology and medicine.
Abstract: The European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) provides an ideal framework to establish multi-disciplinary research networks COST Action BM1203 (EU-ROS) represents a consortium of researchers from different disciplines who are dedicated to providing new insights and tools for better understanding redox biology and medicine and, in the long run, to finding new therapeutic strategies to target dysregulated redox processes in various diseases This report highlights the major achievements of EU-ROS as well as research updates and new perspectives arising from its members The EU-ROS consortium comprised more than 140 active members who worked together for four years on the topics briefly described below The formation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) is an established hallmark of our aerobic environment and metabolism but RONS also act as messengers via redox regulation of essential cellular processes The fact that many diseases have been found to be associated with oxidative stress established the theory of oxidative stress as a trigger of diseases that can be corrected by antioxidant therapy However, while experimental studies support this thesis, clinical studies still generate controversial results, due to complex pathophysiology of oxidative stress in humans For future improvement of antioxidant therapy and better understanding of redox-associated disease progression detailed knowledge on the sources and targets of RONS formation and discrimination of their detrimental or beneficial roles is required In order to advance this important area of biology and medicine, highly synergistic approaches combining a variety of diverse and contrasting disciplines are needed

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TL;DR: Investigation of the effect of polyethylene microbeads from cosmetic products on duckweed, a freshwater floating plant, concluded that micro Beads can also have negative impacts on floating plants in freshwater ecosystems.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The prevention and correction of organ dysfunction represent a therapeutic target of interest in AHF and should be evaluated in clinical trials to determine if such interventions impact mortality, morbidity and patient‐centred outcomes.
Abstract: Organ injury and impairment are commonly observed in patients with acute heart failure (AHF), and congestion is an essential pathophysiological mechanism of impaired organ function Congestion is the predominant clinical profile in most patients with AHF; a smaller proportion presents with peripheral hypoperfusion or cardiogenic shock Hypoperfusion further deteriorates organ function The injury and dysfunction of target organs (ie heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, intestine, brain) in the setting of AHF are associated with increased risk for mortality Improvement in organ function after decongestive therapies has been associated with a lower risk for post-discharge mortality Thus, the prevention and correction of organ dysfunction represent a therapeutic target of interest in AHF and should be evaluated in clinical trials Treatment strategies that specifically prevent, reduce or reverse organ dysfunction remain to be identified and evaluated to determine if such interventions impact mortality, morbidity and patient-centred outcomes This paper reflects current understanding among experts of the presentation and management of organ impairment in AHF and suggests priorities for future research to advance the field

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the multilevel interplay among team-level, job-related, and individual characteristics in stimulating employees' innovative work behavior (IWB) based on the theoretical frameworks of achievement goal theory (AGT) and job characteristics theory (JCT).
Abstract: This study investigates the multilevel interplay among team-level, job-related, and individual characteristics in stimulating employees' innovative work behavior (IWB) based on the theoretical frameworks of achievement goal theory (AGT) and job characteristics theory (JCT). A multilevel two-source study of 240 employees and their 34 direct supervisors in two medium-sized Slovenian companies revealed significant two- and three-way interactions, where a mastery climate, task interdependence, and decision autonomy moderated the relationship between knowledge hiding and IWB. When employees hide knowledge, a team mastery climate only facilitates high levels of IWB if accompanied by either high task interdependence or high decision autonomy. In the absence of one of these job characteristics, knowledge hiding prevents higher levels of IWB even in the case of strong team mastery climate. The results suggest that multiple job design antecedents are necessary to neutralize the negative influence of knowledge hiding on micro-innovation processes within organizations.

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TL;DR: In this article, a choline-chloride-based NADES with malic acid as the hydrogen bond donor was selected as the most promising, which provided more effective extraction of wine lees anthocyanins compared to a conventional solvent.

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TL;DR: In this article, a large scale numerical simulation of spin dynamics in the anisotropic Heisenberg XXZ spin 1/2 chain starting from an inhomogeneous mixed initial state which is symmetric with respect to spin reversal and spatial reflection is performed.
Abstract: Generalized hydrodynamics predicts universal ballistic transport in integrable lattice systems when prepared in generic inhomogeneous initial states. However, the ballistic contribution to transport can vanish in systems with additional discrete symmetries. Here we perform large scale numerical simulations of spin dynamics in the anisotropic Heisenberg XXZ spin 1/2 chain starting from an inhomogeneous mixed initial state which is symmetric with respect to a combination of spin reversal and spatial reflection. In the isotropic and easy-axis regimes we find non-ballistic spin transport which we analyse in detail in terms of scaling exponents of the transported magnetization and scaling profiles of the spin density. While in the easy-axis regime we find accurate evidence of normal diffusion, the spin transport in the isotropic case is clearly super-diffusive, with the scaling exponent very close to 2/3, but with universal scaling dynamics which obeys the diffusion equation in nonlinearly scaled time.

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TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective, block-randomized, controlled clinical study (PREemptive Pharmacogenomic testing for prevention of adverse drug reaction [PREPARE]), pre-emptive genotyping of a panel of clinically relevant PGx-markers, for which guidelines are available, will be implemented across healthcare institutions in seven European countries.
Abstract: Despite scientific and clinical advances in the field of pharmacogenomics (PGx), application into routine care remains limited. Opportunely, several implementation studies and programs have been initiated over recent years. This article presents an overview of these studies and identifies current research gaps. Importantly, one such gap is the undetermined collective clinical utility of implementing a panel of PGx-markers into routine care, because the evidence base is currently limited to specific, individual drug-gene pairs. The Ubiquitous Pharmacogenomics (U-PGx) Consortium, which has been funded by the European Commission's Horizon-2020 program, aims to address this unmet need. In a prospective, block-randomized, controlled clinical study (PREemptive Pharmacogenomic testing for prevention of Adverse drug REactions [PREPARE]), pre-emptive genotyping of a panel of clinically relevant PGx-markers, for which guidelines are available, will be implemented across healthcare institutions in seven European countries. The impact on patient outcomes and cost-effectiveness will be investigated. The program is unique in its multicenter, multigene, multidrug, multi-ethnic, and multihealthcare system approach.

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TL;DR: This report aims to develop uniform guidelines for the management of the gastroenterological and nutritional problems in children with neurological impairment using the approach of the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation.
Abstract: Objectives:Feeding difficulties are frequent in children with neurological impairments and can be associated with undernutrition, growth failure, micronutrients deficiencies, osteopenia, and nutritional comorbidities. Gastrointestinal problems including gastroesophageal reflux disease, const

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TL;DR: The Galactic Archaeology with HERMES (GALAH) survey as discussed by the authors is a massive observational project to trace the Milky Way's history of star formation, chemical enrichment, stellar migration and minor mergers.
Abstract: The Galactic Archaeology with HERMES (GALAH) Survey is a massive observational project to trace the Milky Way's history of star formation, chemical enrichment, stellar migration and minor mergers. Using high-resolution (R$\simeq$28,000) spectra taken with the High Efficiency and Resolution Multi-Element Spectrograph (HERMES) instrument at the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT), GALAH will determine stellar parameters and abundances of up to 29 elements for up to one million stars. Selecting targets from a colour-unbiased catalogue built from 2MASS, APASS and UCAC4 data, we expect to observe dwarfs at 0.3 to 3 kpc and giants at 1 to 10 kpc. This enables a thorough local chemical inventory of the Galactic thin and thick disks, and also captures smaller samples of the bulge and halo. In this paper we present the plan, process and progress as of early 2016 for GALAH survey observations. In our first two years of survey observing we have accumulated the largest high-quality spectroscopic data set at this resolution, over 200,000 stars. We also present the first public GALAH data catalogue: stellar parameters (Teff, log(g), [Fe/H], [alpha/Fe]), radial velocity, distance modulus and reddening for 10680 observations of 9860 Tycho-2 stars that may be included in the first Gaia data release.