Institution
University of Ljubljana
Education•Ljubljana, Slovenia•
About: University of Ljubljana is a education organization based out in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Liquid crystal. The organization has 17210 authors who have published 47013 publications receiving 1082684 citations. The organization is also known as: Univerza v Ljubljani.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, a study of visual and erosion effects of cavitation on simple single hydrofoil configurations in a cavitation tunnel was made, where a thin copper foil was used as an erosion sensor.
207 citations
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TL;DR: A review of present literature data on the usage of plant extracts in poultry, pig and ruminant nutrition is reviewed.
Abstract: Use of herbs and spices and their extracts in animal nutrition The ban on nutritive antibiotic use in Europe and the increased awareness of the consumers triggered a need for natural and safe feed additives to achieve better production results of farm animals. plant extracts are used in animal nutrition as appetite and digestion stimulants, stimulants of physiological functions, for prevention and treatment of certain pathological conditions, as colorants and antioxidants. This article is a review of present literature data on the usage of plant extracts in poultry, pig and ruminant nutrition.
207 citations
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TL;DR: Theoretical and experimental results show that permeabilization is not only a function of electric field intensity and cell size but also of cell shape and orientation, and the surface exposed to the transmembrane potential above the threshold value was calculated.
Abstract: The transmembrane potential on a cell exposed to an electric field is a critical parameter for successful cell permeabilization. In this study, the effect of cell shape and orientation on the induced transmembrane potential was analyzed. The transmembrane potential was calculated on prolate and oblate spheroidal cells for various orientations with respect to the electric field direction, both numerically and analytically. Changing the orientation of the cells decreases the induced transmembrane potential from its maximum value when the longest axis of the cell is parallel to the electric field, to its minimum value when the longest axis of the cell is perpendicular to the electric field. The dependency on orientation is more pronounced for elongated cells while it is negligible for spherical cells. The part of the cell membrane where a threshold transmembrane potential is exceeded represents the area of electropermeabilization, i.e. the membrane area through which the transport of molecules is established. Therefore the surface exposed to the transmembrane potential above the threshold value was calculated. The biological relevance of these theoretical results was confirmed with experimental results of the electropermeabilization of plated Chinese hamster ovary cells, which are elongated. Theoretical and experimental results show that permeabilization is not only a function of electric field intensity and cell size but also of cell shape and orientation.
207 citations
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TL;DR: This review summarizes available data on the pathogenesis and clinical features of TBE, plus different vaccine preparations available in Europe and Russia, plus new treatment possibilities, including small molecule drugs and experimental immunotherapies are reviewed.
207 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors revisited the popular performance measures and tracker performance visualizations and analyzed them theoretically and experimentally, and showed that several measures are equivalent from the point of information they provide for tracker comparison and, crucially, that some are more brittle than the others.
Abstract: The problem of visual tracking evaluation is sporting a large variety of performance measures, and largely suffers from lack of consensus about which measures should be used in experiments. This makes the cross-paper tracker comparison difficult. Furthermore, as some measures may be less effective than others, the tracking results may be skewed or biased toward particular tracking aspects. In this paper, we revisit the popular performance measures and tracker performance visualizations and analyze them theoretically and experimentally. We show that several measures are equivalent from the point of information they provide for tracker comparison and, crucially, that some are more brittle than the others. Based on our analysis, we narrow down the set of potential measures to only two complementary ones, describing accuracy and robustness, thus pushing toward homogenization of the tracker evaluation methodology. These two measures can be intuitively interpreted and visualized and have been employed by the recent visual object tracking challenges as the foundation for the evaluation methodology.
207 citations
Authors
Showing all 17388 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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David Miller | 203 | 2573 | 204840 |
Hyun-Chul Kim | 176 | 4076 | 183227 |
James M. Tour | 143 | 859 | 91364 |
Carmen García | 139 | 1503 | 96925 |
Bernt Schiele | 130 | 568 | 70032 |
Vladimir Cindro | 129 | 1157 | 82000 |
Teresa Barillari | 129 | 984 | 78782 |
Sven Menke | 129 | 1121 | 82034 |
Horst Oberlack | 129 | 985 | 80069 |
Hubert Kroha | 129 | 1126 | 80746 |
Peter Schacht | 129 | 1030 | 80092 |
Siegfried Bethke | 129 | 1266 | 103520 |
Igor Mandić | 128 | 1065 | 79498 |
Stefan Kluth | 128 | 1261 | 84534 |
Andrej Gorišek | 128 | 951 | 67830 |