Institution
University of the Aegean
Education•Mytilene, Greece•
About: University of the Aegean is a education organization based out in Mytilene, Greece. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 2818 authors who have published 8100 publications receiving 179275 citations. The organization is also known as: UAEG.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Spanish National Research Council1, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki2, Centre national de la recherche scientifique3, University of Queensland4, University of the Aegean5, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology6, University of Vienna7, PSL Research University8, Marine Institute of Memorial University of Newfoundland9, University of Primorska10, Stanford University11, National Institute of Oceanography, India12, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences13, University of Tartu14
TL;DR: It is shown that a risk-based approach to CEAs decreases complexity, allows for the transparent treatment of uncertainty and streamlines the uptake of scientific outcomes into the science-policy interface, which can help bridging the gap between science and decision-making in ecosystem-based management.
133 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors review and synthesize findings from six important areas of landscape research in Europe and discuss how these findings may advance the study of ecosystem change and society and its thematic key priorities: linkages between people and the environment in landscapes, landscape structure and land-use intensity, long-term landscape history, driving forces, processes and actors of landscape change, landscape values and meanings, and landscape stewardship.
Abstract: Landscapes are closely linked to human well-being, but they are undergoing rapid and fundamental change. Understanding the societal transformation underlying these landscape changes, as well as the ecological and societal outcomes of landscape transformations across scales are prime areas for landscape research. We review and synthesize findings from six important areas of landscape research in Europe and discuss how these findings may advance the study of ecosystem change and society and its thematic key priorities. These six areas are: (1) linkages between people and the environment in landscapes, (2) landscape structure and land-use intensity, (3) long-term landscape history, (4) driving forces, processes, and actors of landscape change, (5) landscape values and meanings, and (6) landscape stewardship. We propose that these knowledge areas can contribute to the study of ecosystem change and society, considering nested multiscale dynamics of social-ecological systems; the stewardship of these systems and their ecosystem services; and the relationships between ecosystem services, human well-being, wealth, and poverty. Our synthesis highlights that knowledge about past and current landscape patterns, processes, and dynamics provides guidance for developing visions to support the sustainable stewardship of social-ecological systems under future conditions.
132 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a comprehensive modeling analysis to identify global trends in extreme wave energy flux (WEF) along coastlines in the 21st century under a high emission pathway (Representative Concentration Pathways 8.5).
Abstract: In this study we conducted a comprehensive modeling analysis to identify global trends in extreme wave energy flux (WEF) along coastlines in the 21st century under a high emission pathway (Representative Concentration Pathways 8.5). For the end of the century, results show a significant increase up to 30% in 100 year return level WEF for the majority of the coastal areas of the southern temperate zone, while in the Northern Hemisphere large coastal areas are characterized by a significant negative trend. We show that the most significant long-term trends of extreme WEF can be explained by intensification of teleconnection patterns such as the Antarctic Oscillation, El Nino–Southern Oscillation, and North Atlantic Oscillation. The projected changes will have broad implications for ocean engineering applications and disaster risk management. Especially low-lying coastal countries in the Southern Hemisphere will be particularly vulnerable due to the combined effects of projected relative sea level rise and more extreme wave activities.
132 citations
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TL;DR: A metaheuristic algorithm is proposed in order to classify the cells of pap-smear samples, and shows that classification accuracy generally outperforms other previously applied intelligent approaches.
132 citations
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TL;DR: It was found that Pb, As and Ni have common sources, which could be vehicles emissions/oil combustion and resuspended road dust, and Cd and a portion of As originate from industrial activities.
132 citations
Authors
Showing all 2889 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
B. G. Pope | 125 | 926 | 75215 |
C. Guicheney | 88 | 271 | 37715 |
Konstantinos Papageorgiou | 83 | 365 | 22316 |
Ioannis Gkialas | 83 | 316 | 21400 |
Konstantinos Papageorgiou | 71 | 280 | 17500 |
Th. D. Papadopoulou | 70 | 272 | 32541 |
Ioannis Gkialas | 70 | 268 | 16867 |
Mikael Johansson | 65 | 526 | 18329 |
Penelope Vounatsou | 63 | 242 | 11944 |
Nikolaos S. Thomaidis | 57 | 275 | 10388 |
Camilla Di Donato | 57 | 185 | 9481 |
Nicholas Apergis | 56 | 445 | 14876 |
Polychronis C Tzedakis | 54 | 106 | 8982 |
Stelios Katsanevakis | 47 | 183 | 7680 |
Diomidis Spinellis | 45 | 314 | 7819 |