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Institution

University of Seville

EducationSeville, Andalucía, Spain
About: University of Seville is a education organization based out in Seville, Andalucía, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Model predictive control. The organization has 20098 authors who have published 47317 publications receiving 947007 citations. The organization is also known as: Universidad de Sevilla.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article provides a comprehensive survey on metamorphic testing, which summarises the research results and application areas, and analyses common practice in empirical studies of metamorphIC testing as well as the main open challenges.
Abstract: A test oracle determines whether a test execution reveals a fault, often by comparing the observed program output to the expected output. This is not always practical, for example when a program's input-output relation is complex and difficult to capture formally. Metamorphic testing provides an alternative, where correctness is not determined by checking an individual concrete output, but by applying a transformation to a test input and observing how the program output “morphs” into a different one as a result. Since the introduction of such metamorphic relations in 1998, many contributions on metamorphic testing have been made, and the technique has seen successful applications in a variety of domains, ranging from web services to computer graphics. This article provides a comprehensive survey on metamorphic testing: It summarises the research results and application areas, and analyses common practice in empirical studies of metamorphic testing as well as the main open challenges.

362 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this tutorial review, the different strategies and findings related to the development of these directed borylation reactions via C-H or C(sp(3))-H activation will be summarized and discussed.
Abstract: The direct borylation of hydrocarbons via C–H activation has reached an impressive level of sophistication and efficiency, emerging as a fundamental tool in synthesis because of the versatility offered by organoboron compounds. As a remarkable particularity, the catalytic systems originally developed for these reactions are relatively insensitive to directing effects, and the regioselectivity of the borylations is typically governed by steric factors. Likely stimulated by the great synthetic potential of the expected functionalised organoboranes, however, many groups have recently focused on the development of complementary strategies for directed, site-selective borylation reactions where a directing group controls the course of the reaction. In this tutorial review, the different strategies and findings related to the development of these directed borylation reactions via C(sp2)–H or C(sp3)–H activation will be summarized and discussed.

360 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered the case in which the thermal energy required by a solar ORC is supplied by means of stationary solar collectors and derived the operating conditions of the ORC that minimizes the aperture area needed per unit of mechanical power output for every working fluid and every solar collector.

360 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, photoactive titania powders with variable amount of anatase and rutile phases were prepared by heating of pure anatase in the temperatutre range 800-1150°C.
Abstract: Nanosized titanium dioxide photocatalysts with varying amount of anatase and rutile phases have been synthesized. Homogeneous precipitation of aqueous solutions containing TiOSO 4 with urea was used to prepare porous spherical clusters of anatase TiO 2. Photoactive titania powders with variable amount of anatase and rutile phases were prepared by heating of pure anatase in the temperatutre range 800–1150 °C. The structure evolution during heating of the starting anatase powders was studied by XRD analysis in overall temperature range of phase transformation. The morphology and microstucture characteristics were also obtained by HRTEM, BET and BJH. The spherical particle morphology of TiO 2 mixtures determined by SEM was stable in air up to 900 °C. The photocatalytic activity of the sample titania TIT85/825 heated to 825 °C in air, contained 77.4% anatase and 22.6% rutile was higher than that nanocrystalline anatase powder. Titania sample TIT85/825 reveals the highest catalytic activity during the photocatalyzed degradation of 4-chlorophenol in aqueous suspension.

359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is shown of a switch in the activated microglia phenotype from alternative, at the beginning of Aβ pathology, to a classical at advanced stage of the disease in this model, induced by the age-dependent accumulation of extracellular soluble Aβ oligomers.
Abstract: Although the microglial activation is concomitant to the Alzheimer's disease, its precise role (neuroprotection vs neurodegeneration) has not yet been resolved. Here, we show the existence of an age-dependent phenotypic change of microglial activation in the hippocampus of PS1xAPP model, from an alternative activation state with Abeta phagocytic capabilities (at 6 months) to a classic cytotoxic phenotype (expressing TNF-alpha and related factors) at 18 months of age. This switch was coincident with high levels of soluble Abeta oligomers and a significant pyramidal neurodegeneration. In vitro assays, using astromicroglial cultures, demonstrated that oligomeric Abeta42 and soluble extracts from 18-month-old PS1xAPP hippocampus produced a potent TNF-alpha induction whereas monomeric Abeta42 and soluble extract from 6- or 18-month-old control and 6-month-old PS1xAPP hippocampi produced no stimulation. This stimulatory effect was avoided by immunodepletion using 6E10 or A11. In conclusion, our results show evidence of a switch in the activated microglia phenotype from alternative, at the beginning of Abeta pathology, to a classical at advanced stage of the disease in this model. This change was induced, at least in part, by the age-dependent accumulation of extracellular soluble Abeta oligomers. Finally, these cytotoxic activated microglial cells could participate in the neuronal lost observed in AD.

359 citations


Authors

Showing all 20465 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Aaron Dominguez1471968113224
Jose M. Ordovas123102470978
Detlef Lohse104107542787
Miroslav Krstic9595542886
María Vallet-Regí9571141641
John S. Sperry9316035602
Jose Rodriguez9380358176
Shun-ichi Amari9049540383
Michael Ortiz8746731582
Bruce J. Paster8426128661
Floyd E. Dewhirst8122942613
Joan Montaner8048922413
Francisco B. Ortega7950326069
Luis Paz-Ares7759231496
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023143
2022567
20213,357
20203,480
20193,032
20182,766