scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Turku

EducationTurku, Finland
About: University of Turku is a education organization based out in Turku, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 16296 authors who have published 45124 publications receiving 1505428 citations. The organization is also known as: Turun yliopisto & Åbo universitet.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2007-Ecology
TL;DR: It is emphasized here that social information use is a process consisting of the scenes of event, observation, decision, and consequence, where the initial event is a scene in such a process of another individual, and the potential value of social information is affected by the distance in time, space, and ecology.
Abstract: Decision making can be facilitated by observing other individuals faced with the same or similar problem, and recent research suggests that this social information use is a widespread phenomenon. Implications of this are diverse and profound: for example, social information use may trigger cultural evolution, affect distribution and dispersal of populations, and involve intriguing cognitive traits. We emphasize here that social information use is a process consisting of the scenes of (1) event, (2) observation, (3) decision, and (4) consequence, where the initial event is a scene in such a process of another individual. This helps to construct a sound conceptual framework for measuring and studying social information use. Importantly, the potential value of social information is affected by the distance in time, space, and ecology between the initial observation and eventual consequence of a decision. Because negative interactions between individuals (such as direct and apparent competition) also depend on the distance between individuals along these dimensions, the potential value of information and the negative interactions may form a trade-off situation. Optimal solutions to this trade-off can result in adaptively extended social information use, where using information gathered some time ago, some distance away, and from ecologically different individuals is preferred. Conceivably, using information gathered from a heterospecific individual might often be optimal. Many recent studies demonstrate that social information use does occur between species, and the first review of published cases is provided here. Such interaction between species, especially in habitat selection, has important consequences for community ecology and conservation. Adaptively extended social information use may also be an important evolutionary force in guild formation. Complex coevolutionary patterns may result depending on the effect of information use on the provider of information.

415 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that rainbow trout immune parameters were enhanced by using probiotic bacteria.

415 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Claus Meyer1, Julia Hofmann1, Thomas Burmeister2, Daniela Gröger2, T S Park3, Mariana Emerenciano, M. Pombo De Oliveira, Aline Renneville4, Patrick Villarese5, Elizabeth Macintyre5, Hélène Cavé5, Emmanuelle Clappier5, K. Mass-Malo5, Jan Zuna6, Jan Trka6, E De Braekeleer7, M. De Braekeleer7, S H Oh8, Grigory Tsaur, L Fechina, V H J van der Velden9, J J M van Dongen9, Eric Delabesse, Renata Binato, Mara Silva, AM Kustanovich, Olga V. Aleinikova, Marian H. Harris10, T Lund-Aho, Vesa Juvonen11, Olaf Heidenreich12, Josef Vormoor12, William W.L. Choi13, Marie Jarošová, A. Kolenova14, Clara Bueno15, Pablo Menendez15, S. Wehner1, Cornelia Eckert2, Pascaline Talmant16, Sylvie Tondeur, Eric Lippert, E. Launay17, Catherine Henry17, Paola Ballerini18, H. Lapillone18, Mary Callanan19, Jean Michel Cayuela5, Charles Herbaux, Giovanni Cazzaniga20, P. M. Kakadiya21, Stefan K. Bohlander21, Martina Ahlmann, Jong Rak Choi22, Paula Gameiro23, Dongsoon Lee24, Juergen Krauter25, Pascale Cornillet-Lefebvre, G te Kronnie26, Beat W. Schäfer27, S. Kubetzko27, Cristina N. Alonso, U. Zur Stadt28, Rosemary Sutton29, N. C. Venn29, Shai Izraeli30, Luba Trakhtenbrot31, H. O. Madsen32, P. Archer33, Jeremy Hancock33, Nuno Cerveira34, Manuel R. Teixeira34, L Lo Nigro35, Anja Möricke36, Martin Stanulla36, Martin Schrappe36, Lukasz Sedek37, Tomasz Szczepański37, Christian M. Zwaan9, Eva A. Coenen9, M.M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink9, Sabine Strehl38, Michael Dworzak38, Renate Panzer-Grümayer38, Theodor Dingermann1, Thomas Klingebiel1, Rolf Marschalek1 
30 Apr 2013-Leukemia
TL;DR: Long-distance inverse-polymerase chain reaction was used to characterize the chromosomal rearrangement of individual acute leukemia patients and revealed a total of 121 different MLL rearrangements, of which 79 TPGs are now characterized at the molecular level.
Abstract: Chromosomal rearrangements of the human MLL (mixed lineage leukemia) gene are associated with high-risk infant, pediatric, adult and therapy-induced acute leukemias. We used long-distance inverse-polymerase chain reaction to characterize the chromosomal rearrangement of individual acute leukemia patients. We present data of the molecular characterization of 1590 MLL-rearranged biopsy samples obtained from acute leukemia patients. The precise localization of genomic breakpoints within the MLL gene and the involved translocation partner genes (TPGs) were determined and novel TPGs identified. All patients were classified according to their gender (852 females and 745 males), age at diagnosis (558 infant, 416 pediatric and 616 adult leukemia patients) and other clinical criteria. Combined data of our study and recently published data revealed a total of 121 different MLL rearrangements, of which 79 TPGs are now characterized at the molecular level. However, only seven rearrangements seem to be predominantly associated with illegitimate recombinations of the MLL gene (∼90%): AFF1/AF4, MLLT3/AF9, MLLT1/ENL, MLLT10/AF10, ELL, partial tandem duplications (MLL PTDs) and MLLT4/AF6, respectively. The MLL breakpoint distributions for all clinical relevant subtypes (gender, disease type, age at diagnosis, reciprocal, complex and therapy-induced translocations) are presented. Finally, we present the extending network of reciprocal MLL fusions deriving from complex rearrangements.

414 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Dental materials offer a continuously challenging forum for silanes, and silanes will play an essential role in material development.
Abstract: Purpose: This overview presents a description of organofunctional trialkoxysilane coupling agents (silanes), their chemistry, properties, use, and some of the main clinical experiences in dentistry. Materials and Methods: The main emphasis was on major dental journals that have been reviewed from 1958 up to the latest research news from 2002. A MEDLINE search with the key words “dental silanes” was used. Special silane literature and journals outside dentistry were also cited. Results: The main emphasis is on the use of silanes in prosthetic and restorative dentistry. Clinical relevance was based mainly on either short- or long-term tests. The interpretation of various results is not given, mainly because of controversial observations that may be very difficult to explain. Nevertheless, the majority of the clinical results pointed to silanes playing a significant role in the adhesion process. Silane reaction mechanisms were not entirely understood, and there exist several theories for bonding mechanisms for silanes and substrates. Conclusion: Dental materials offer a continuously challenging forum for silanes, and silanes will play an essential role in material development. Publ. in: Int J Prosthodont 2004;17:155–164.

414 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This analysis revealed that a major Paleolithic population expansion from the "Atlantic zone" (southwestern Europe) occurred 10,000-15,000 years ago, after the Last Glacial Maximum, with haplogroup V, an autochthonous European haplogroups most likely originated in the northern Iberian peninsula or southwestern France at about the time of the Younger Dryas.
Abstract: mtDNA sequence variation was studied in 419 individuals from nine Eurasian populations, by high-resolution RFLP analysis, and it was followed by sequencing of the control region of a subset of these mtDNAs and a detailed survey of previously published data from numerous other European populations. This analysis revealed that a major Paleolithic population expansion from the "Atlantic zone" (southwestern Europe) occurred 10,000-15,000 years ago, after the Last Glacial Maximum. As an mtDNA marker for this expansion we identified haplogroup V, an autochthonous European haplogroup, which most likely originated in the northern Iberian peninsula or southwestern France at about the time of the Younger Dryas. Its sister haplogroup, H, which is distributed throughout the entire range of Caucasoid populations and which originated in the Near East approximately 25,000-30,000 years ago, also took part in this expansion, thus rendering it by far the most frequent (40%-60%) haplogroup in western Europe. Subsequent migrations after the Younger Dryas eventually carried those "Atlantic" mtDNAs into central and northern Europe. This scenario, already implied by archaeological records, is given overwhelming support from both the distribution of the autochthonous European Y chromosome type 15, as detected by the probes 49a/f, and the synthetic maps of nuclear data.

412 citations


Authors

Showing all 16461 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kari Alitalo174817114231
Mika Kivimäki1661515141468
Jaakko Kaprio1631532126320
Veikko Salomaa162843135046
Markus W. Büchler148154593574
Eugene C. Butcher14644672849
Steven Williams144137586712
Terho Lehtimäki1421304106981
Olli T. Raitakari1421232103487
Pim Cuijpers13698269370
Jeroen J. Bax132130674992
Sten Orrenius13044757445
Aarno Palotie12971189975
Stefan W. Hell12757765937
Carlos López-Otín12649483933
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Helsinki
113.1K papers, 4.6M citations

97% related

Lund University
124.6K papers, 5M citations

96% related

University of Copenhagen
149.7K papers, 5.9M citations

96% related

University of Amsterdam
140.8K papers, 5.9M citations

94% related

University of Manchester
168K papers, 6.4M citations

92% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023102
2022290
20212,673
20202,688
20192,407
20182,189