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Institution

University of Louisville

EducationLouisville, Kentucky, United States
About: University of Louisville is a education organization based out in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 24600 authors who have published 49248 publications receiving 1573346 citations. The organization is also known as: UofL.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A vision for a redesigned information systems core class that adopts digital innovation as a fundamental and powerful concept (FPC) is presented and the implications of adoptingdigital innovation as an FPC are examined.
Abstract: The 50-year march of Moore's Law has led to the creation of a relatively cheap and increasingly easy-touse world-wide digital infrastructure of computers, mobile devices, broadband network connections, and advanced application platforms. This digital infrastructure has, in turn, accelerated the emergence of new technologies that enable transformations in how we live and work, how companies organize, and the structure of entire industries. As a result, it has become important for all business students to have a strong grounding in IT and digital innovation in order to manage, lead, and transform organizations that are increasingly dependent on digital innovation. Yet, at many schools, students do not get such grounding because the required information systems core class is stuck in the past. We present a vision for a redesigned IS core class that adopts digital innovation as a fundamental and powerful concept (FPC). A good FPC serves as both a foundational concept and an organizing principle for a course. We espouse a particularly broad conceptualization of digital innovation that allows for a variety of teaching styles and topical emphases for the IS core class. This conceptualization includes three types of innovation (i.e., process, product, and business model innovation), and four stages for the overall innovation process (i.e., discovery, development, diffusion, and impact). Based on this conceptualization, we examine the implications of adopting digital innovation as an FPC. We also briefly discuss broader implications relating to (1) the IS curriculum beyond the core class, (2) the research agenda for the IS field, and (3) the identity and legitimacy of IS in business schools.

613 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2014-Brain
TL;DR: It is shown that neuromodulation of the sub-threshold motor state of excitability of the lumbosacral spinal networks was the key to recovery of intentional movement in four of four individuals diagnosed as having complete paralysis of the legs.
Abstract: Previously, we reported that one individual who had a motor complete, but sensory incomplete spinal cord injury regained voluntary movement after 7 months of epidural stimulation and stand training. We presumed that the residual sensory pathways were critical in this recovery. However, we now report in three more individuals voluntary movement occurred with epidural stimulation immediately after implant even in two who were diagnosed with a motor and sensory complete lesion. We demonstrate that neuromodulating the spinal circuitry with epidural stimulation, enables completely paralysed individuals to process conceptual, auditory and visual input to regain relatively fine voluntary control of paralysed muscles. We show that neuromodulation of the sub-threshold motor state of excitability of the lumbosacral spinal networks was the key to recovery of intentional movement in four of four individuals diagnosed as having complete paralysis of the legs. We have uncovered a fundamentally new intervention strategy that can dramatically affect recovery of voluntary movement in individuals with complete paralysis even years after injury.

610 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that P gingivalis rapidly generates citrullinated host peptides by proteolytic cleavage at Arg-X peptide bonds by arginine gingipains, followed bycitrullination of carboxy-terminal arginines by bacterial PAD.
Abstract: Objectives To investigate protein citrullination by the periodontal pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis (P. gingivalis) as a potential mechanism for breaking tolerance to citrullinated proteins in rheumatoid arthritis (RA).

608 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
J. P. Lees1, V. Poireau1, V. Tisserand1, E. Grauges2  +337 moreInstitutions (73)
TL;DR: The concept for this analysis is to a large degree based on earlier BABAR work and we acknowledge the guidance provided by M. Mazur as discussed by the authors, who consulted with theorists A. Datta, S. Westhoff,S. Fajfer, J. Kamenik, and I. Nisandzic on the calculations of the charged Higgs contributions to the decay rates.
Abstract: The concept for this analysis is to a large degree based on earlier BABAR work and we acknowledge the guidance provided by M. Mazur. The authors consulted with theorists A. Datta, S. Westhoff, S. Fajfer, J. Kamenik, and I. Nisandzic on the calculations of the charged Higgs contributions to the decay rates. We are grateful for the extraordinary contributions of our PEP-II colleagues in achieving the excellent luminosity and machine conditions that have made this work possible. The success of this project also relied critically on the expertise and dedication of the computing organizations that support BABAR. The collaborating institutions wish to thank SLAC for its support and the kind hospitality extended to them. This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and National Science Foundation, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (Canada), the Commissariat a l'Energie Atomique and Institut National de Physique Nucleaire et de Physique des Particules (France), the Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany), the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (Italy), the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (Netherlands), the Research Council of Norway, the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (Spain), and the Science and Technology Facilities Council (United Kingdom). Individuals have received support from the Marie-Curie IEF program (European Union) and the A. P. Sloan Foundation (USA).

607 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Jun 2006
TL;DR: The built Colored SIFT (CSIFT) is more robust than the conventional SIFT with respect to color and photometrical variations and the evaluation results support the potential of the proposed approach.
Abstract: SIFT has been proven to be the most robust local invariant feature descriptor. SIFT is designed mainly for gray images. However, color provides valuable information in object description and matching tasks. Many objects can be misclassified if their color contents are ignored. This paper addresses this problem and proposes a novel colored local invariant feature descriptor. Instead of using the gray space to represent the input image, the proposed approach builds the SIFT descriptors in a color invariant space. The built Colored SIFT (CSIFT) is more robust than the conventional SIFT with respect to color and photometrical variations. The evaluation results support the potential of the proposed approach.

603 citations


Authors

Showing all 24802 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert M. Califf1961561167961
Aaron R. Folsom1811118134044
Yang Gao1682047146301
Stephen J. O'Brien153106293025
James J. Collins15166989476
Anthony E. Lang149102895630
Sw. Banerjee1461906124364
Hermann Kolanoski145127996152
Ferenc A. Jolesz14363166198
Daniel S. Berman141136386136
Aaron T. Beck139536170816
Kevin J. Tracey13856182791
C. Dallapiccola1361717101947
Michael I. Posner134414104201
Alan Sher13248668128
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202373
2022249
20212,489
20202,234
20192,193
20182,153