Institution
University of Portsmouth
Education•Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom•
About: University of Portsmouth is a education organization based out in Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 5452 authors who have published 14256 publications receiving 424346 citations. The organization is also known as: Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and Art & Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and the Arts.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Redshift, Context (language use), Computer science
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: News has a greater ability to discriminate patients at risk of the combined outcome of cardiac arrest, unanticipated ICU admission or death within 24h of a NEWS value than 33 other EWSs.
749 citations
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Kevork N. Abazajian1, Jennifer K. Adelman-McCarthy2, Marcel A. Agüeros3, S. Allam2 +164 more•Institutions (47)
TL;DR: The Third Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) as mentioned in this paper contains data taken up through 2003 June, including imaging data in five bands over 5282 deg2, photometric and astrometric catalogs of the 141 million objects detected in these imaging data, and spectra of 528,640 objects selected over 4188 deg2.
Abstract: This paper describes the Third Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). This release, containing data taken up through 2003 June, includes imaging data in five bands over 5282 deg2, photometric and astrometric catalogs of the 141 million objects detected in these imaging data, and spectra of 528,640 objects selected over 4188 deg2. The pipelines analyzing both images and spectroscopy are unchanged from those used in our Second Data Release.
734 citations
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TL;DR: A new model of LPS recognition is proposed, based on the discovery of the TLRs and the LPS-activation cluster, which comprises heat-shock proteins (Hsps) 70 and 90, chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) and growth differentiation factor 5 (GDF5).
714 citations
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New England Biolabs1, New York State Department of Health2, Columbia University3, Wayne State University4, University of Basel5, University of Toledo6, University of Edinburgh7, University of Alabama8, University of Portsmouth9, Moscow State University10, University of Illinois at Chicago11, University of Bristol12, University of Rochester13, Duke University14, University of Sheffield15, Vilnius University16, University of Giessen17, University of Copenhagen18, Hungarian Academy of Sciences19, North Carolina State University20, University of Tokyo21, Humboldt University of Berlin22, Brookhaven National Laboratory23, University of Massachusetts Medical School24, National Institutes of Health25, Indian Institute of Science26, University of Warsaw27, University of California, Santa Barbara28, State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology VECTOR29, University of Oregon30, The Chinese University of Hong Kong31, University of Maryland, College Park32, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center33, University of Wisconsin-Madison34, University of Nebraska–Lincoln35, University of Lisbon36
TL;DR: In this article, a nomenclature for restriction endonucleases, DNA methyltransferases, homing endon nucleases and related genes and gene products is described.
Abstract: A nomenclature is described for restriction endonucleases, DNA methyltransferases, homing endonucleases and related genes and gene products. It provides explicit categories for the many different Type II enzymes now identified and provides a system for naming the putative genes found by sequence analysis of microbial genomes.
710 citations
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TL;DR: Compared with shocks, empirical ATP for FVT is highly effective, is equally safe, and improves quality of life, measured with the SF-36.
Abstract: Background— Successful antitachycardia pacing (ATP) terminates ventricular tachycardia (VT) up to 250 bpm without the need for painful shocks in implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) patients. Fast VT (FVT) >200 bpm is often treated by shock because of safety concerns, however. This prospective, randomized, multicenter trial compares the safety and utility of empirical ATP with shocks for FVT in a broad ICD population. Methods and Results— We randomized 634 ICD patients to 2 arms—standardized empirical ATP (n=313) or shock (n=321)—for initial therapy of spontaneous FVT. ICDs were programmed to detect FVT when 18 of 24 intervals were 188 to 250 bpm and 0 of the last 8 intervals were >250 bpm. Initial FVT therapy was ATP (8 pulses, 88% of FVT cycle length) or shock at 10 J above the defibrillation threshold. Syncope and arrhythmic symptoms were collected through patient diaries and interviews. In 11±3 months of follow-up, 431 episodes of FVT occurred in 98 patients, representing 32% of ventricular ta...
708 citations
Authors
Showing all 5624 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Robert C. Nichol | 187 | 851 | 162994 |
Gavin Davies | 159 | 2036 | 149835 |
Daniel Thomas | 134 | 846 | 84224 |
Will J. Percival | 129 | 473 | 87752 |
Claudia Maraston | 103 | 362 | 59178 |
I. W. Harry | 98 | 312 | 65338 |
Timothy Clark | 95 | 1137 | 53665 |
Kevin Schawinski | 95 | 376 | 30207 |
Ashley J. Ross | 90 | 248 | 46395 |
Josep Call | 90 | 451 | 34196 |
David A. Wake | 89 | 214 | 46124 |
L. K. Nuttall | 89 | 253 | 54834 |
Stephen Neidle | 89 | 457 | 32417 |
Andrew Lundgren | 88 | 249 | 57347 |
Rita Tojeiro | 87 | 229 | 43140 |