Institution
University of Milano-Bicocca
Education•Milan, Italy•
About: University of Milano-Bicocca is a education organization based out in Milan, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Blood pressure. The organization has 8972 authors who have published 22322 publications receiving 620484 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca & Universita degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca.
Papers published on a yearly basis
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University of Milano-Bicocca1, University of Strasbourg2, Novartis3, Chelyabinsk State Medical Academy4, Moscow State University5, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey6, University of British Columbia7, Universidade Nova de Lisboa8, Henan University9, University of Cambridge10, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne11, Royal Society of Chemistry12
TL;DR: The Online Chemical Modeling Environment is a web-based platform that aims to automate and simplify the typical steps required for QSAR modeling and to invite the original authors to contribute their results, make them publicly available, share them with other users and to become members of the growing research community.
Abstract: The Online Chemical Modeling Environment is a web-based platform that aims to automate and simplify the typical steps required for QSAR modeling. The platform consists of two major subsystems: the database of experimental measurements and the modeling framework. A user-contributed database contains a set of tools for easy input, search and modification of thousands of records. The OCHEM database is based on the wiki principle and focuses primarily on the quality and verifiability of the data. The database is tightly integrated with the modeling framework, which supports all the steps required to create a predictive model: data search, calculation and selection of a vast variety of molecular descriptors, application of machine learning methods, validation, analysis of the model and assessment of the applicability domain. As compared to other similar systems, OCHEM is not intended to re-implement the existing tools or models but rather to invite the original authors to contribute their results, make them publicly available, share them with other users and to become members of the growing research community. Our intention is to make OCHEM a widely used platform to perform the QSPR/QSAR studies online and share it with other users on the Web. The ultimate goal of OCHEM is collecting all possible chemoinformatics tools within one simple, reliable and user-friendly resource. The OCHEM is free for web users and it is available online at http://www.ochem.eu.
416 citations
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TL;DR: Somatoparaphrenia is often brought about by extensive right-sided lesions, but patients with posterior (parietal-temporal), and insular damage are on record, as well as a few patients with subcortical lesions.
Abstract: A review of published brain-damaged patients showing delusional beliefs concerning the contralesional side of the body (somatoparaphrenia) is presented. Somatoparaphrenia has been reported, with a few exceptions, in right-brain-damaged patients, with motor and somatosensory deficits, and the syndrome of unilateral spatial neglect. Somatoparaphrenia, most often characterized by a delusion of disownership of left-sided body parts, may however occur without associated anosognosia for motor deficits, and personal neglect. Also somatosensory deficits may not be a core pathological mechanism of somatoparaphrenia, and visual field disorders may be absent. Deficits of proprioception, however, may play a relevant role. Somatoparaphrenia is often brought about by extensive right-sided lesions, but patients with posterior (parietal-temporal), and insular damage are on record, as well as a few patients with subcortical lesions. Possible pathological factors include a deranged representation of the body concerned with ownership, mainly right-hemisphere-based, and deficits of multisensory integration. Finally, the rubber hand illusion, that brings about a bodily misattribution in neurologically unimpaired participants, as somatoparaphrenia does in brain-damaged patients, is briefly discussed.
413 citations
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30 Jul 2014
409 citations
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TL;DR: This article developed a replication recipe, outlining standard criteria for a convincing close replication, which can be used by researchers, teachers, and students to conduct meaningful replication studies and integrate replications into their scholarly habits.
408 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a next-to-leading order calculation of Higgs boson production via gluon fusion interfaced to shower Monte Carlo programs, implemented according to the POWHEG method, is presented.
Abstract: We present a next-to-leading order calculation of Higgs boson production via gluon fusion interfaced to shower Monte Carlo programs, implemented according to the POWHEG method. A detailed comparison with MC@NLO and PYTHIA is carried out for several observables, for the Tevatron and LHC colliders. Comparisons with next-to-next-to-leading order results and with resummed ones are also presented.
408 citations
Authors
Showing all 9226 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Carlo Rovelli | 146 | 1502 | 103550 |
Giuseppe Mancia | 145 | 1369 | 139692 |
Marco Bersanelli | 142 | 526 | 105135 |
Teruki Kamon | 142 | 2034 | 115633 |
Marco Colonna | 139 | 512 | 71166 |
M. I. Martínez | 134 | 1251 | 79885 |
A. Mennella | 132 | 463 | 93236 |
Roberto Salerno | 132 | 1197 | 83409 |
Federico Ferri | 132 | 1376 | 89337 |
Marco Paganoni | 132 | 1438 | 88482 |
Arabella Martelli | 131 | 1318 | 84029 |
Sandra Malvezzi | 129 | 1326 | 84401 |
Andrea Massironi | 129 | 1115 | 78457 |
Marco Pieri | 129 | 1285 | 82914 |
Cristina Riccardi | 129 | 1627 | 91452 |