Institution
University of New South Wales
Education•Sydney, New South Wales, Australia•
About: University of New South Wales is a education organization based out in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 51197 authors who have published 153634 publications receiving 4880608 citations. The organization is also known as: UNSW & UNSW Australia.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Health care, Mental health, Silicon
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This survey surveys different technologies and methodologies for indoor and outdoor localization with an emphasis on indoor methodologies and concepts and discusses different localization-based applications, where the location information is critical to estimate.
Abstract: The availability of location information has become a key factor in today's communications systems allowing location based services. In outdoor scenarios, the mobile terminal position is obtained with high accuracy thanks to the global positioning system (GPS) or to the standalone cellular systems. However, the main problem of GPS and cellular systems resides in the indoor environment and in scenarios with deep shadowing effects where the satellite or cellular signals are broken. In this paper, we survey different technologies and methodologies for indoor and outdoor localization with an emphasis on indoor methodologies and concepts. Additionally, we discuss in this review different localization-based applications, where the location information is critical to estimate. Finally, a comprehensive discussion of the challenges in terms of accuracy, cost, complexity, security, scalability, etc. is given. The aim of this survey is to provide a comprehensive overview of existing efforts as well as auspicious and anticipated dimensions for future work in indoor localization techniques and applications.
705 citations
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01 Jan 2003TL;DR: A Petri net-based algebra is proposed, used to model control flows, as a necessary constituent of reliable Web service composition process and is expressive enough to capture the semantics of complex Web service combinations.
Abstract: The Internet is going through several major changes. It has become a vehicle of Web services rather than just a repository of information. Many organizations are putting their core business competencies on the Internet as a collection of Web services. An important challenge is to integrate them to create new value-added Web services in ways that could never be foreseen forming what is known as Business-to-Business (B2B) services. Therefore, there is a need for modeling techniques and tools for reliable Web service composition. In this paper, we propose a Petri net-based algebra, used to model control flows, as a necessary constituent of reliable Web service composition process. This algebra is expressive enough to capture the semantics of complex Web service combinations.
705 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed an index of brittleness based on the ratio H/Kc, where H is hardness (resistance to deformation) and Kc is toughness.
Abstract: The ratio H/Kc, wjere His hardness (resistance to deformation) and Kc. is toughness (resistance to fracture), is proposed as an index of brittleness. Indentation mechanics provides the scientific basis for this proposal. The analysis, developed in terms of a model contact system, indicates that all materials are more susceptible to deformation in small-scale loading events and to fracture in large-scale events. By normalizing the characteristic dimensions of the two competing processes and the contact load in terms of appropriate functions of H and Kc a universal deformation/fracture diagram can be constructed. From this diagram the mechanical response of any material of known hardness and toughness may be predicted for any prospective in-service contact loading conditions. The concept offers a simple approach to materials classification for design purposes.
703 citations
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Wellcome Trust1, European Bioinformatics Institute2, University of Manchester3, University of Cambridge4, Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics5, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne6, Institute for Systems Biology7, University College Dublin8, Utrecht University9, University of Vienna10, Max Planck Society11, New York University12, Amgen13, University of California, Los Angeles14, Applied Biosystems15, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior16, Flanders Institute for Biotechnology17, University of New South Wales18, Scripps Research Institute19
TL;DR: The processes and principles underpinning the development of guidance modules for reporting the use of techniques such as gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry are described and the ramifications for various interest groups such as experimentalists, funders, publishers and the private sector are discussed.
Abstract: Both the generation and the analysis of proteomics data are now widespread, and high-throughput approaches are commonplace. Protocols continue to increase in complexity as methods and technologies evolve and diversify. To encourage the standardized collection, integration, storage and dissemination of proteomics data, the Human Proteome Organization's Proteomics Standards Initiative develops guidance modules for reporting the use of techniques such as gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. This paper describes the processes and principles underpinning the development of these modules; discusses the ramifications for various interest groups such as experimentalists, funders, publishers and the private sector; addresses the issue of overlap with other reporting guidelines; and highlights the criticality of appropriate tools and resources in enabling 'MIAPE-compliant' reporting.
703 citations
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TL;DR: The notion that brain connectivity can be abstracted to a graph of nodes, representing neural elements linked by edges, representing some measure of structural, functional or causal interaction between nodes, brings connectomic data into the realm of graph theory.
702 citations
Authors
Showing all 51897 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Ronald C. Kessler | 274 | 1332 | 328983 |
Nicholas G. Martin | 192 | 1770 | 161952 |
John C. Morris | 183 | 1441 | 168413 |
Richard S. Ellis | 169 | 882 | 136011 |
Ian J. Deary | 166 | 1795 | 114161 |
Nicholas J. Talley | 158 | 1571 | 90197 |
Wolfgang Wagner | 156 | 2342 | 123391 |
Bruce D. Walker | 155 | 779 | 86020 |
Xiang Zhang | 154 | 1733 | 117576 |
Ian Smail | 151 | 895 | 83777 |
Rui Zhang | 151 | 2625 | 107917 |
Marvin Johnson | 149 | 1827 | 119520 |
John R. Hodges | 149 | 812 | 82709 |
Amartya Sen | 149 | 689 | 141907 |
J. Fraser Stoddart | 147 | 1239 | 96083 |