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Institution

University of Tokyo

EducationTokyo, Japan
About: University of Tokyo is a education organization based out in Tokyo, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 134564 authors who have published 337567 publications receiving 10178620 citations. The organization is also known as: Todai & Universitas Tociensis.
Topics: Population, Gene, Catalysis, Magnetic field, Galaxy


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The preliminary results suggest that CAL is effective and safe for soft tissue augmentation and superior to conventional lipoinjection.
Abstract: Background Lipoinjection is a promising treatment but has some problems, such as unpredictability and a low rate of graft survival due to partial necrosis. Methods To overcome the problems with lipoinjection, the authors developed a novel strategy known as cellassisted lipotransfer (CAL). In CAL, autologous adiposederived stem (stromal) cells (ASCs) are used in combination with lipoinjection. A stromal vascular fraction (SVF) containing ASCs is freshly isolated from half of the aspirated fat and recombined with the other half. This process converts relatively ASC-poor aspirated fat to ASC-rich fat. This report presents the findings for 40 patients who underwent CAL for cosmetic breast augmentation. Results Final breast volume showed augmentation by 100 to 200 ml after a mean fat amount of 270 ml was injected. Postoperative atrophy of injected fat was minimal and did not change substantially after 2 months. Cyst formation or microcalcification was detected in four patients. Almost all the patients were satisfied with the soft and naturalappearing augmentation. Conclusions The preliminary results suggest that CAL is effective and safe for soft tissue augmentation and superior to conventional lipoinjection. Additional study is necessary to evaluate the efficacy of this technique further.

872 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Jun 2003-Nature
TL;DR: Fossilized hominid crania from Herto, Middle Awash, Ethiopia are described and provide crucial evidence on the location, timing and contextual circumstances of the emergence of Homo sapiens.
Abstract: The origin of anatomically modern Homo sapiens and the fate of Neanderthals have been fundamental questions in human evolutionary studies for over a century. A key barrier to the resolution of these questions has been the lack of substantial and accurately dated African hominid fossils from between 100,000 and 300,000 years ago. Here we describe fossilized hominid crania from Herto, Middle Awash, Ethiopia, that fill this gap and provide crucial evidence on the location, timing and contextual circumstances of the emergence of Homo sapiens. Radioisotopically dated to between 160,000 and 154,000 years ago, these new fossils predate classic Neanderthals and lack their derived features. The Herto hominids are morphologically and chronologically intermediate between archaic African fossils and later anatomically modern Late Pleistocene humans. They therefore represent the probable immediate ancestors of anatomically modern humans. Their anatomy and antiquity constitute strong evidence of modern-human emergence in Africa.

871 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
26 Dec 1997-Cell
TL;DR: In both the phasing of dark expression and the response to light mPer1 is most similar to the Neurospora clock gene frq, consistent with the localization of both light-sensitive and light-insensitive oscillators in this circadian center.

869 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article presented a new keyword extraction algorithm that applies to a single document without using a corpus and showed comparable performance to tfidf without using TFIDF without using any corpus, but the degree of biases of distribution is measured by the χ 2 -measure.
Abstract: We present a new keyword extraction algorithm that applies to a single document without using a corpus. Frequent terms are extracted first, then a set of cooccurrence between each term and the frequent terms, i.e., occurrences in the same sentences, is generated. Co-occurrence distribution shows importance of a term in the documentas follows. If probability distribution of co-occurrence between term a and the frequent terms is biased to a particular subset of frequent terms, then term a is likely to be a keyword. The degree of biases of distribution is measured by the χ 2 -measure. Our algorithm shows comparable performance to tfidf without using a corpus.

869 citations


Authors

Showing all 135252 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Ronald C. Kessler2741332328983
Donald P. Schneider2421622263641
George M. Whitesides2401739269833
Jing Wang1844046202769
Tadamitsu Kishimoto1811067130860
Yusuke Nakamura1792076160313
Dennis J. Selkoe177607145825
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
D. M. Strom1763167194314
Masayuki Yamamoto1711576123028
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski1691431128585
Yang Yang1642704144071
Qiang Zhang1611137100950
Kenji Kangawa1531117110059
Takashi Taniguchi1522141110658
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023354
20221,250
202112,943
202013,512
201912,656