Institution
University of Luxembourg
Education•Luxembourg, Luxembourg•
About: University of Luxembourg is a education organization based out in Luxembourg, Luxembourg. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Computer science. The organization has 4744 authors who have published 22175 publications receiving 381824 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The APO-1 antigen was expressed upon transfection of APo-1 cDNA into BL60-P7 Burkitt's lymphoma cells and conferred sensitivity towards anti-APO- 1-induced apoptosis to the transfectants.
886 citations
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TL;DR: A simple and general method is presented to analyze correlations in mutational behavior between different positions in a multiple sequence alignment to predict contact maps for each of 11 protein families and compare the result with the contacts determined by crystallography.
Abstract: The maintenance of protein function and structure constrains the evolution of amino acid sequences. This fact can be exploited to interpret correlated mutations observed in a sequence family as an indication of probable physical contact in three dimensions. Here we present a simple and general method to analyze correlations in mutational behavior between different positions in a multiple sequence alignment. We then use these correlations to predict contact maps for each of 11 protein families and compare the result with the contacts determined by crystallography. For the most strongly correlated residue pairs predicted to be in contact, the prediction accuracy ranges from 37 to 68% and the improvement ratio relative to a random prediction from 1.4 to 5.1. Predicted contact maps can be used as input for the calculation of protein tertiary structure, either from sequence information alone or in combination with experimental information.
876 citations
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TL;DR: An overview of SWIPT systems with a particular focus on the hardware realization of rectenna circuits and practical techniques that achieveSWIPT in the domains of time, power, antennas, and space is provided.
Abstract: Energy harvesting for wireless communication networks is a new paradigm that allows terminals to recharge their batteries from external energy sources in the surrounding environment. A promising energy harvesting technology is wireless power transfer where terminals harvest energy from electromagnetic radiation. Thereby, the energy may be harvested opportunistically from ambient electromagnetic sources or from sources that intentionally transmit electromagnetic energy for energy harvesting purposes. A particularly interesting and challenging scenario arises when sources perform simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT), as strong signals not only increase power transfer but also interference. This article provides an overview of SWIPT systems with a particular focus on the hardware realization of rectenna circuits and practical techniques that achieve SWIPT in the domains of time, power, antennas, and space. The article also discusses the benefits of a potential integration of SWIPT technologies in modern communication networks in the context of resource allocation and cooperative cognitive radio networks.
870 citations
01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, the phonon dispersion relations of the single-layer and bulk dichalcogenides MoS2 and WS2 were investigated and the behavior of the Raman-active modes A1g and E 1 2g as a function of the number of layers was explored.
Abstract: We report ab initio calculations of the phonon dispersion relations of the single-layer and bulk dichalcogenides MoS2 and WS2. We explore in detail the behavior of the Raman-active modes A1g and E 1 2g as a function of the number of layers. In agreement with recent Raman spectroscopy measurements [C. Lee et al., ACS Nano 4, 2695 (2010)], we find that the A1g mode increases in frequency with an increasing number of layers while the E 1g mode decreases. We explain this decrease by an enhancement of the dielectric screening of the long-range Coulomb interaction between the effective charges with a growing number of layers. This decrease in the long-range part overcompensates for the increase of the short-range interaction due to the weak interlayer interaction.
829 citations
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15 May 2006TL;DR: Learning Chapter 2: Coming into Presence Chapter 3: The Community of Those Who Have Nothing in Common Chapter 4: How Difficult Should Education Be? Chapter 5: The Architecture of Education Chapter 6: Education and the Democratic Person Epilogue: A Pedagogy of Interruption as mentioned in this paper
Abstract: Learning Chapter 2: Coming into Presence Chapter 3: The Community of Those Who Have Nothing in Common Chapter 4: How Difficult Should Education Be? Chapter 5: The Architecture of Education Chapter 6: Education and the Democratic Person Epilogue: A Pedagogy of Interruption.
817 citations
Authors
Showing all 4893 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Jun Wang | 166 | 1093 | 141621 |
Leroy Hood | 158 | 853 | 128452 |
Andreas Heinz | 108 | 1078 | 45002 |
Philippe Dubois | 101 | 1098 | 48086 |
John W. Berry | 97 | 351 | 52470 |
Michael Müller | 91 | 333 | 26237 |
Bart Preneel | 82 | 844 | 25572 |
Bjorn Ottersten | 81 | 1058 | 28359 |
Sander Kersten | 79 | 246 | 23985 |
Alexandre Tkatchenko | 77 | 271 | 26863 |
Rudi Balling | 75 | 238 | 19529 |
Lionel C. Briand | 75 | 380 | 24519 |
Min Wang | 72 | 716 | 19197 |
Stephen H. Friend | 70 | 184 | 53422 |
Ekhard K. H. Salje | 70 | 581 | 19938 |