Institution
University of Rennes
Education•Rennes, France•
About: University of Rennes is a education organization based out in Rennes, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Crystal structure. The organization has 18404 authors who have published 40374 publications receiving 995327 citations.
Topics: Population, Crystal structure, Ruthenium, Catalysis, Antenna (radio)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Four French research institutes were mandated to produce a critical scientific analysis on the latest knowledge of the causes, mechanisms, consequences and predictability of eutrophication phenomena and the methodology and the main findings are provided.
521 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted geochemical and Nd isotopic studies on both the basement rocks and Phanerozoic granites from the major tectonic terranes in northern Xinjiang: Altai, Junggar, Tianshan and North Tarim.
520 citations
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University of Cologne1, University of Genoa2, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research3, Westmead Hospital4, University of Sydney5, Federal University of São Paulo6, University of California, San Diego7, Medical University of Graz8, Innsbruck Medical University9, University of Lagos10, McGill University Health Centre11, Fudan University12, Radboud University Nijmegen13, University of Rennes14, Duke University15, University of Texas at Austin16, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio17, Federal University of Paraná18, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston19, Cardiff University20, Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy21
TL;DR: It is proposed to be defined as possible, probable, or proven on the basis of sample validity and thus diagnostic certainty, and recommended first-line therapy is either voriconazole or isavuconazole, while azole resistance is a concern.
Abstract: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 causes direct damage to the airway epithelium, enabling aspergillus invasion. Reports of COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis have raised concerns about it worsening the disease course of COVID-19 and increasing mortality. Additionally, the first cases of COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis caused by azole-resistant aspergillus have been reported. This article constitutes a consensus statement on defining and managing COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis, prepared by experts and endorsed by medical mycology societies. COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis is proposed to be defined as possible, probable, or proven on the basis of sample validity and thus diagnostic certainty. Recommended first-line therapy is either voriconazole or isavuconazole. If azole resistance is a concern, then liposomal amphotericin B is the drug of choice. Our aim is to provide definitions for clinical research and up-to-date recommendations for clinical management of the diagnosis and treatment of COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis.
519 citations
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TL;DR: This work has shown that disocclusion in image-based rendering (IBR) of viewpoints different from those captured by the cameras can be removed in a context of editing.
Abstract: Image inpainting refers to the process of restoring missing or damaged areas in an image. This field of research has been very active over recent years, boosted by numerous applications: restoring images from scratches or text overlays, loss concealment in a context of impaired image transmission, object removal in a context of editing, or disocclusion in image-based rendering (IBR) of viewpoints different from those captured by the cameras. Although earlier work dealing with disocclusion has been published in [1], the term inpainting first appeared in [2] by analogy with a process used in art restoration.
518 citations
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TL;DR: It demonstrates how three polarimetric parameters, namely the scattering entropy, the scattering anisotropy, and the alpha angle may be used in order to decouple surface roughness from moisture content estimation offering the possibility of a straightforward inversion of these two surface parameters.
Abstract: Proposes a new model for the inversion of surface roughness and soil moisture from polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data, based on the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the polarimetric coherency matrix. It demonstrates how three polarimetric parameters, namely the scattering entropy (H), the scattering anisotropy (A), and the alpha angle (/spl alpha/) may be used in order to decouple surface roughness from moisture content estimation offering the possibility of a straightforward inversion of these two surface parameters. The potential of the proposed inversion algorithm is investigated using fully polarimetric laboratory measurements as well as airborne L-band SAR data and ground measurements from two different test sites in Germany, the Elbe-Auen site and the Weiherbach site.
517 citations
Authors
Showing all 18470 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Philippe Froguel | 166 | 820 | 118816 |
Bart Staels | 152 | 824 | 86638 |
Yi Yang | 143 | 2456 | 92268 |
Geoffrey Burnstock | 141 | 1488 | 99525 |
Shahrokh F. Shariat | 118 | 1637 | 58900 |
Lutz Ackermann | 116 | 669 | 45066 |
Douglas R. MacFarlane | 110 | 864 | 54236 |
Elliott H. Lieb | 107 | 512 | 57920 |
Fu-Yuan Wu | 107 | 367 | 42039 |
Didier Sornette | 104 | 1295 | 44157 |
Stefan Hild | 103 | 452 | 68228 |
Pierre I. Karakiewicz | 101 | 1207 | 40072 |
Philippe Dubois | 101 | 1098 | 48086 |
François Bondu | 100 | 440 | 69284 |
Jean-Michel Savéant | 98 | 517 | 33518 |