Institution
University of Nebraska Omaha
Education•Omaha, Nebraska, United States•
About: University of Nebraska Omaha is a education organization based out in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 4526 authors who have published 8905 publications receiving 213914 citations. The organization is also known as: UNO & University of Omaha.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: The proposed method which using extreme learning machine to detect network intrusion has better performance than support vector machines in terms of sensitivity.
Abstract: Network intrusion refers to inappropriate, incorrect, or anomalous activities aimed at compromise computer networks The early and reliable detection of network attacks is a pressing issue of today’s network security Classification methods are one the major tools in network intrusion detection A successful network intrusion detection system needs to have high classification accuracies and low false alarm rates In this chapter, we apply the kernel-based MCLP model to the network intrusion detection The performance of this model is tested using two network datasets The first dataset, NeWT, is collected by the STEAL lab at University of Nebraska at Omaha, The second dataset is the KDDCUP-99 data set which was provided by DARPA in 1998 for the evaluation of intrusion detection approaches
106 citations
••
TL;DR: It appears that both social instability and anthropogenic disturbance, but not the ecological variables examined, elevate fGC concentrations and represent stressors for wild spotted hyenas.
106 citations
••
TL;DR: The emergence of sociological theorizing in the field of aging is described as a sequence of two transformations in gerontological thinking, which involved not so much the recognition of theory as a reflection of that recognition itself, being metatheoretical.
Abstract: The emergence of sociological theorizing in the field of aging is described as a sequence of two transformations in gerontological thinking. Each transformation signals a principal change in the conception of the nature and practice of gerontological inquiry. The first transformation was marked by Cumming and Henry's book Growing Old: The Process of Disengagement (1961), in which a formal theory of aging is laid out for the first time by social scientists. This set the stage for the development of a range of alternative theoretical challenges. There is a second transformation that began in the late 1970s and early 80s which involved not so much the recognition of theory as a reflection of that recognition itself, being metatheoretical. The issues raised represented a fundamental concern with the so-called "facts" of aging themselves, focusing on the socially constructive and ideological features of age conceptualizations-social phenomenological and Marxist concerns, respectively. More recently (in the late 1980s and early 90s), social gerontologists have turned to critical theory and feminist perspectives to also examine these issues.
105 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the electronic structures of the fully bare and half-bare zigzag-edged boron nitride nanoribbons were calculated by using density functional theory.
Abstract: We calculate the electronic structures of the fully bare and half-bare zigzag-edged boron nitride nanoribbons by using density functional theory. We find that the ground states of both the fully bare boron nitride nanoribbons and the boron nitride nanoribbons with a bare N edge and a H-terminated B edge are half-metallic. The alignment of the spin at the bare B edge is antiferromagnetic, while that at the bare N edge is ferromagnetic in the ground states of both the fully bare and half-bare zigzag-edged boron nitride nanoribbons. The H-terminated B or N edge of the half-bare zigzag-edged boron nitride nanoribbon exhibits no magnetism.
105 citations
••
TL;DR: Anti-HCV antibodies were identifiable in sera stored for 13 to 17 years and were more prevalent in patients with myocarditis and HF than in the general population.
105 citations
Authors
Showing all 4588 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Darell D. Bigner | 130 | 819 | 90558 |
Dan L. Longo | 125 | 697 | 56085 |
William B. Dobyns | 105 | 430 | 38956 |
Eamonn Martin Quigley | 103 | 685 | 39585 |
Howard E. Gendelman | 101 | 567 | 39460 |
Alexander V. Kabanov | 99 | 447 | 34519 |
Douglas T. Fearon | 94 | 278 | 35140 |
Dapeng Yu | 94 | 745 | 33613 |
John E. Wagner | 94 | 488 | 35586 |
Zbigniew K. Wszolek | 93 | 576 | 39943 |
Surinder K. Batra | 87 | 564 | 30653 |
Frank L. Graham | 85 | 255 | 39619 |
Jing Zhou | 84 | 533 | 37101 |
Manish Sharma | 82 | 1407 | 33361 |
Peter F. Wright | 77 | 252 | 21498 |