Institution
University of Paris
Education•Paris, France•
About: University of Paris is a education organization based out in Paris, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 102426 authors who have published 174180 publications receiving 5041753 citations. The organization is also known as: Sorbonne.
Topics: Population, Medicine, Context (language use), Transplantation, Gene
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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University of California, San Diego1, Johns Hopkins University2, University of Washington3, University of California, San Francisco4, University of Pennsylvania5, Duke University6, University of Toronto7, New York University8, University of Chicago9, University of Maryland, Baltimore10, University of Paris11, University of Jena12, Victoria University of Wellington13, Brigham Young University14, Primary Children's Hospital15, McGill University16, Kaiser Permanente17, University of Pittsburgh18, Brown University19
TL;DR: An international multidisciplinary team of 29 members with expertise in guideline development, evidence analysis, and family-centered care is assembled to revise the 2007 Clinical Practice Guidelines for support of the family in the patient-centered ICU.
Abstract: Objective:To provide clinicians with evidence-based strategies to optimize the support of the family of critically ill patients in the ICU.Methods:We used the Council of Medical Specialty Societies principles for the development of clinical guidelines as the framework for guideline development. We a
935 citations
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TL;DR: The CYP2C19*2 genetic variant is a major determinant of prognosis in young patients who are receiving clopidogrel treatment after myocardial infarction and is the only independent predictor of cardiovascular events.
931 citations
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TL;DR: A spontaneous, rhythmic activity initiated in the subiculum of slices from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy was described, similar to interictal discharges of patient electroencephalograms.
Abstract: The origin and mechanisms of human interictal epileptic discharges remain unclear. Here, we describe a spontaneous, rhythmic activity initiated in the subiculum of slices from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. Synchronous events were similar to interictal discharges of patient electroencephalograms. They were suppressed by antagonists of either glutamatergic or γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)–ergic signaling. The network of neurons discharging during population events comprises both subicular interneurons and a subgroup of pyramidal cells. In these pyramidal cells, GABAergic synaptic events reversed at depolarized potentials. Depolarizing GABAergic responses in neurons downstream to the sclerotic CA1 region contribute to human interictal activity.
930 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the potential of different quantum repeater protocols quantitatively, with a focus on the most immediate goal of outperforming the direct transmission of photons, and compare different approaches to realize quantum repeaters.
Abstract: The distribution of quantum states over long distances is limited by photon loss. Straightforward amplification as in classical telecommunications is not an option in quantum communication because of the no-cloning theorem. This problem could be overcome by implementing quantum repeater protocols, which create long-distance entanglement from shorter-distance entanglement via entanglement swapping. Such protocols require the capacity to create entanglement in a heralded fashion, to store it in quantum memories, and to swap it. One attractive general strategy for realizing quantum repeaters is based on the use of atomic ensembles as quantum memories, in combination with linear optical techniques and photon counting to perform all required operations. Here we review the theoretical and experimental status quo of this very active field. We compare the potential of different approaches quantitatively, with a focus on the most immediate goal of outperforming the direct transmission of photons.
930 citations
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TL;DR: Evaluated the performance of ten high dimensional classification methods proposed to automatically discriminate between patients with Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment and elderly controls using 509 subjects from the ADNI database, finding whole-brain methods achieved high accuracies and the use of feature selection did not improve the performance but substantially increased the computation times.
929 citations
Authors
Showing all 102613 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Guido Kroemer | 236 | 1404 | 246571 |
David H. Weinberg | 183 | 700 | 171424 |
Paul M. Thompson | 183 | 2271 | 146736 |
Chris Sander | 178 | 713 | 233287 |
Sophie Henrot-Versille | 171 | 957 | 157040 |
Richard H. Friend | 169 | 1182 | 140032 |
George P. Chrousos | 169 | 1612 | 120752 |
Mika Kivimäki | 166 | 1515 | 141468 |
Martin Karplus | 163 | 831 | 138492 |
William J. Sandborn | 162 | 1317 | 108564 |
Darien Wood | 160 | 2174 | 136596 |
Monique M.B. Breteler | 159 | 546 | 93762 |
Paul Emery | 158 | 1314 | 121293 |
Wolfgang Wagner | 156 | 2342 | 123391 |
Joao Seixas | 153 | 1538 | 115070 |