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Institution

University of Marburg

EducationMarburg, Germany
About: University of Marburg is a education organization based out in Marburg, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Virus. The organization has 23195 authors who have published 42907 publications receiving 1506069 citations. The organization is also known as: Philipps University of Marburg & Philipps-Universität.
Topics: Population, Virus, Gene, Exciton, Photoluminescence


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis examines the relation between coparenting and child adjustment and concludes that coparents are important for the psychological adjustment of children and that they should pay further regard to this construct.
Abstract: SYNOPSIS Objective . The present meta-analysis examines the relation between coparenting and child adjustment. Design . The authors integrate 59 studies and differentiate among cooperation, agreement, conflict, and triangulation as dimensions of coparenting. Further, they differentiate internalizing and externalizing symptoms, social functioning of children, and attachment as outcomes. Results . Effect sizes were generally small and, to some extent, moderated by age of the children, percentage of girls in the sample, clinical background of the sample, mono-informant bias, annual family income, and percentage of separated parents. Effect sizes remained significant after controlling for individual parenting or marital quality. Coparenting predicted change in child adjustment. Conclusions . Coparenting is important for the psychological adjustment of children. Research and practice should pay further regard to this construct.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work has shown that events in prenatal and neonatal life orchestrate mucosal homeostasis, and several environmental factors promote the perinatal programming of the immune system, including colonization of the gut and airways by commensal microorganisms.
Abstract: The mucosal surfaces of the gut and airways have important barrier functions and regulate the induction of immunological tolerance. The rapidly increasing incidence of chronic inflammatory disorders of these surfaces, such as inflammatory bowel disease and asthma, indicates that the immune functions of these mucosae are becoming disrupted in humans. Recent data indicate that events in prenatal and neonatal life orchestrate mucosal homeostasis. Several environmental factors promote the perinatal programming of the immune system, including colonization of the gut and airways by commensal microorganisms. These complex microbial-host interactions operate in a delicate temporal and spatial manner and have an important role in the induction of homeostatic mechanisms.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Nov 2004-Brain
TL;DR: It is shown that RBD patients have a profound impairment of olfactory function, which correlates with the neuropathological staging of Parkinson's disease (stages 1-3) as proposed by Braak.
Abstract: REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) and olfactory dysfunction are common and very early features of alpha-synucleinopathies, in particular Parkinson's disease. To investigate the hypothesis that these two clinical features in combination are an indicator of evolving alpha-synucleinopathy, olfactory function was assessed in RBD. We studied 30 patients (18 male, 12 female; mean age 48 +/- 14 years, range 19-78 years) with clinical (idiopathic, n = 6; symptomatic, n = 13, mostly associated with narcolepsy) or subclinical (n = 11, associated with narcolepsy) RBD according to standard criteria and 30 age- and gender-matched healthy control subjects using standardized 'Sniffin' Sticks'. RBD patients had a significantly higher olfactory threshold (P = 0.0001), lower discrimination score (P = 0.003), and lower identification score (P = 0.001). Compared with normative data, 97% of the RBD patients had a pathologically increased olfactory threshold, 63% an impaired odour discrimination score, and 63% a decreased identification score. On neurological examination, signs of parkinsonism were newly found in five patients with clinical RBD (not associated with narcolepsy), who usually had a long history of 'idiopathic' RBD. Four of the five patients fulfilled the UK Brain Bank criteria for the clinical diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. The underlying nigrostriatal degeneration of clinical Parkinson's disease was confirmed by I-123-FP-CIT SPECT in one patient and early nigrostriatal degeneration was identified by SPECT in a further two patients with 'idiopathic' clinical RBD out of 11 RBD patients who agreed to undergo SPECT studies. Our study shows that RBD patients have a profound impairment of olfactory function. Five patients with clinical RBD not associated with narcolepsy had clinical or imaging signs of nigrostriatal degeneration. This new clinical finding correlates with the neuropathological staging of Parkinson's disease (stages 1-3) as proposed by Braak. In stage 1, the anterior olfactory nucleus or the olfactory bulb is affected (along with the dorsal motor nucleus of the glossopharyngeal and vagal nerves). In stage 2, additional lesions consistently remain confined to the medulla oblongata and pontine tegmentum, which are critical areas for RBD. Midbrain lesions are found only in stage 3, in particular degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. Thus, 'idiopathic' RBD patients with olfactory impairment might present with stage 2 preclinical alpha-synucleinopathy. Since narcoleptic patients are not known to have an increased risk of developing parkinsonism, the pathophysiology and clinical relevance of hyposmia in RBD/narcolepsy patients requires further research.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Rayleigh-Bénard theory is extended towards very large Prandtl numbers Pr and the Nusselt number Nu is found here to be independent of Pr, however, for fixed Rayleigh numbers Ra a maximum in the Nu(Pr) dependence is predicted.
Abstract: The Rayleigh-Benard theory by Grossmann and Lohse [J. Fluid Mech. 407, 27 (2000)] is extended towards very large Prandtl numbers Pr. The Nusselt number Nu is found here to be independent of Pr. However, for fixed Rayleigh numbers Ra a maximum in the Nu(Pr) dependence is predicted. We moreover offer the full functional dependences of Nu(Ra,Pr) and Re(Ra,Pr) within this extended theory, rather than only give the limiting power laws as done in J. Fluid. Mech. 407, 27 (2000). This enables us to more realistically describe the transitions between the various scaling regimes.

432 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: From the correlation of the gel bands with 12 isolated polypeptides from which the complete amino acid sequence is known, it is concluded that mammalian cytochrome c oxidase consists of 13 different polypeptin which can all be separated by the described procedure.

432 citations


Authors

Showing all 23488 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John C. Morris1831441168413
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Martin J. Blaser147820104104
Christopher T. Walsh13981974314
Markus Cristinziani131114084538
James C. Paulson12644352152
Markus F. Neurath12493462376
Nicholas W. Wood12361466270
Florian Lang116142166496
Howard I. Maibach116182160765
Thomas G. Ksiazek11339846108
Frank Glorius11366349305
Eberhard Ritz111110961530
Manfred T. Reetz11095942941
Wolfgang H. Oertel11065351147
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023142
2022412
20212,103
20201,918
20191,749
20181,592