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Institution

University of Madeira

EducationFunchal, Portugal
About: University of Madeira is a education organization based out in Funchal, Portugal. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Dendrimer. The organization has 1014 authors who have published 2759 publications receiving 59457 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The orange pyridine-substituted clusters are air-stable and thermally stable with simple pyridines, light- and air-sensitive with organometallic pyrIDines, andAir-fragile and thermologically fragile with large dendronized pyridsines.
Abstract: Hexasubstitution of apical triflate ligands in the octahedral clusters [M]2[Mo6X8(CF3SO3)6] (M = n-Bu4N or Cs, X = Br or I) and monosubstitution in [n-Bu4N]2[Mo6Br13(CF3SO3)] was carried out in tetrahydrofuran at 60 °C with simple pyridines and then extended to organometallic pyridines, yielding cluster-cored stars, and to dendronic polyallyl- and polyferrocenylpyridines, yielding cluster-cored polyallyl and polyferrocenyl dendrimers and dendrons. The orange pyridine-substituted clusters, whose pyridine protons are deshielded in 1H NMR (a practical tool for characterization), are air-stable and thermally stable with simple pyridines, light- and air-sensitive with organometallic pyridines, and air-fragile and thermally fragile with large dendronized pyridines.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article conducted a bibliometric review to evaluate the global research patterns for island endemic bats with respect to individual species, geographical distribution and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List categories, and identified species-based and area-based priorities for future research.
Abstract: Evidence-based knowledge is critical for the delineation and success of conservation interventions. However, despite limited research resources, research efforts frequently fail to target conservation priorities. Island endemic bats (IEBs) are a poorly studied group inhabiting some of the world's most vulnerable habitats, and for which no review of research allocation has ever been conducted. We conducted a bibliometric review to evaluate the global research patterns for IEBs with respect to individual species, geographical distribution and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List categories. Additionally, we studied the relationship between the number of publications and changes in Red List category, and identified species-based and area-based priorities for future research. IEBs are significantly more threatened than bat species that are not island endemics. However, research focusing on IEBs is scarce, centred on species of lesser conservation concern, and spatially asymmetric, overlooking areas of high IEB biodiversity. Conservation-oriented research seems to target species facing high extinction risk, but is extremely thinly and unevenly distributed. Although we found a positive association between research effort and improvement in Red List category, an increase in extinction risk did not trigger more scientific attention. A prioritisation analysis highlighted, as the top five islands for species richness in the least-studied and highest conservation concern IEBs: Sulawesi, Timor, New Guinea, Java, and Borneo. The ten species of highest research priority include threatened and Data Deficient species from Southeast Asian and Pacific islands. Conservation-oriented research seems to be too scarce to satisfy conservation needs. The observed mismatch between research allocation and conservation priorities may reflect the fact that highly endangered species are unattractive targets for fund-raising, due to species crypticity, high research budget requirements, and high risk of project failure. However, our findings support the importance of research for the conservation of IEBs, and we therefore advocate that more attention is directed towards the least-known species.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a high birefringent D-type fiber loop mirror was used as a refractometer for simultaneous measurement of refractive index and temperature, showing a linear and independent response to both parameters.
Abstract: A high birefringent D-type fibre loop mirror used as refractometer is reported. A chemical etching was applied to the D-type fibre and presented high sensitivity for the surrounding medium refractive index. The refractometer was tested with different refractive indices in liquids and characterized in temperature, showing a linear and independent response to both parameters. With these results the refractometer can perform simultaneous measurement of refractive index and temperature.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address the question: why the majority of active compounds in the CNS domain natural products are NPs or NP-inspired, and find that ∼84% of the approved drugs for CNS diseases are either small-molecule natural products or NPs-inspired.
Abstract: Small-molecule natural products (NPs) have a long and successful track record of providing first-in-class drugs and pharmacophore (scaffolds) in all therapeutic areas, serving as a bridge between modern and traditional medicine. This trajectory has been remarkably successful in three key areas of modern therapeutics: cancers, infections, and CNS diseases. Beginning with the discovery of morphine 200 years ago, natural products have remained the primary source of new drugs/scaffolds for CNS diseases. In this perspective, we address the question: why are the majority of active compounds in the CNS domain natural products? Our analysis indicates that ∼84% approved drugs for CNS diseases are NPs or NP-inspired, and interestingly, 20 natural products provided more than 400 clinically approved CNS drugs. We have discussed unique physicochemical properties of NPs and NP-inspired vis-a-vis synthetic drugs, isoform selectivity, and evolutionary relationship, providing a rationale for increasing focus on natural pr...

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jan 2009-Talanta
TL;DR: This study showed that each cherimoya cultivars have 40 common compounds, corresponding to different chemical families, namely terpenes, esters, alcohols, fatty acids and carbonyl compounds and using PCA, the volatile composition in terms of average peak areas provided a suitable tool to differentiate among the cherimaya cultivars.

52 citations


Authors

Showing all 1027 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Dirk Helbing10164256810
Xiangyang Shi7947022028
Jodi Forlizzi6723717292
Armando J. D. Silvestre6438114739
John W. Clark6070713999
José Luís da Silva5923511972
Carmen S. R. Freire5823910307
Jose Luis Santos544029004
Vladimir V. Konotop5342611073
A. R. Bishop5155111946
Manfred Kaufmann4626620172
José D. Santos452205875
Vassilis Kostakos452707015
Pedro L. Granja441325969
Stéphane Cordier433716802
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20239
202223
2021212
2020233
2019212
2018186