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Institution

University of Utah

EducationSalt Lake City, Utah, United States
About: University of Utah is a education organization based out in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 52894 authors who have published 124076 publications receiving 5265834 citations. The organization is also known as: The U & The University of Utah.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: SDSS-III as mentioned in this paper is a program of four spectroscopic surveys on three scientific themes: dark energy and cosmological parameters, the history and structure of the Milky Way, and the population of giant planets around other stars.
Abstract: Building on the legacy of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-I and II), SDSS-III is a program of four spectroscopic surveys on three scientific themes: dark energy and cosmological parameters, the history and structure of the Milky Way, and the population of giant planets around other stars. In keeping with SDSS tradition, SDSS-III will provide regular public releases of all its data, beginning with SDSS DR8 (which occurred in Jan 2011). This paper presents an overview of the four SDSS-III surveys. BOSS will measure redshifts of 1.5 million massive galaxies and Lya forest spectra of 150,000 quasars, using the BAO feature of large scale structure to obtain percent-level determinations of the distance scale and Hubble expansion rate at z 100 per resolution element), H-band (1.51-1.70 micron) spectra of 10^5 evolved, late-type stars, measuring separate abundances for ~15 elements per star and creating the first high-precision spectroscopic survey of all Galactic stellar populations (bulge, bar, disks, halo) with a uniform set of stellar tracers and spectral diagnostics. MARVELS will monitor radial velocities of more than 8000 FGK stars with the sensitivity and cadence (10-40 m/s, ~24 visits per star) needed to detect giant planets with periods up to two years, providing an unprecedented data set for understanding the formation and dynamical evolution of giant planet systems. (Abridged)

2,265 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Silvia De Rubeis1, Xin-Xin He2, Arthur P. Goldberg1, Christopher S. Poultney1, Kaitlin E. Samocha3, A. Ercument Cicek2, Yan Kou1, Li Liu2, Menachem Fromer3, Menachem Fromer1, R. Susan Walker4, Tarjinder Singh5, Lambertus Klei6, Jack A. Kosmicki3, Shih-Chen Fu1, Branko Aleksic7, Monica Biscaldi8, Patrick Bolton9, Jessica M. Brownfeld1, Jinlu Cai1, Nicholas G. Campbell10, Angel Carracedo11, Angel Carracedo12, Maria H. Chahrour3, Andreas G. Chiocchetti, Hilary Coon13, Emily L. Crawford10, Lucy Crooks5, Sarah Curran9, Geraldine Dawson14, Eftichia Duketis, Bridget A. Fernandez15, Louise Gallagher16, Evan T. Geller17, Stephen J. Guter18, R. Sean Hill19, R. Sean Hill3, Iuliana Ionita-Laza20, Patricia Jiménez González, Helena Kilpinen, Sabine M. Klauck21, Alexander Kolevzon1, Irene Lee22, Jing Lei2, Terho Lehtimäki, Chiao-Feng Lin17, Avi Ma'ayan1, Christian R. Marshall4, Alison L. McInnes23, Benjamin M. Neale24, Michael John Owen25, Norio Ozaki7, Mara Parellada26, Jeremy R. Parr27, Shaun Purcell1, Kaija Puura, Deepthi Rajagopalan4, Karola Rehnström5, Abraham Reichenberg1, Aniko Sabo28, Michael Sachse, Stephen Sanders29, Chad M. Schafer2, Martin Schulte-Rüther30, David Skuse22, David Skuse31, Christine Stevens24, Peter Szatmari32, Kristiina Tammimies4, Otto Valladares17, Annette Voran33, Li-San Wang17, Lauren A. Weiss29, A. Jeremy Willsey29, Timothy W. Yu19, Timothy W. Yu3, Ryan K. C. Yuen4, Edwin H. Cook18, Christine M. Freitag, Michael Gill16, Christina M. Hultman34, Thomas Lehner35, Aarno Palotie24, Aarno Palotie3, Aarno Palotie36, Gerard D. Schellenberg17, Pamela Sklar1, Matthew W. State29, James S. Sutcliffe10, Christopher A. Walsh3, Christopher A. Walsh19, Stephen W. Scherer4, Michael E. Zwick37, Jeffrey C. Barrett5, David J. Cutler37, Kathryn Roeder2, Bernie Devlin6, Mark J. Daly24, Mark J. Daly3, Joseph D. Buxbaum1 
13 Nov 2014-Nature
TL;DR: Using exome sequencing, it is shown that analysis of rare coding variation in 3,871 autism cases and 9,937 ancestry-matched or parental controls implicates 22 autosomal genes at a false discovery rate of < 0.05, plus a set of 107 genes strongly enriched for those likely to affect risk (FDR < 0.30).
Abstract: The genetic architecture of autism spectrum disorder involves the interplay of common and rare variants and their impact on hundreds of genes. Using exome sequencing, here we show that analysis of rare coding variation in 3,871 autism cases and 9,937 ancestry-matched or parental controls implicates 22 autosomal genes at a false discovery rate (FDR) < 0.05, plus a set of 107 autosomal genes strongly enriched for those likely to affect risk (FDR < 0.30). These 107 genes, which show unusual evolutionary constraint against mutations, incur de novo loss-of-function mutations in over 5% of autistic subjects. Many of the genes implicated encode proteins for synaptic formation, transcriptional regulation and chromatin-remodelling pathways. These include voltage-gated ion channels regulating the propagation of action potentials, pacemaking and excitability-transcription coupling, as well as histone-modifying enzymes and chromatin remodellers-most prominently those that mediate post-translational lysine methylation/demethylation modifications of histones.

2,228 citations

Book
01 Jan 1998

2,212 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
10 Mar 1995-Cell
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated patients with long QT syndrome (LQT), an inherited disorder causing sudden death from a ventricular tachyarrythmia, torsade de pointes.

2,207 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These guidelines differ from those published in 1997 in several ways: the screening interval for double contrast barium enema has been shortened to 5 years, and colonoscopy is the preferred test for the diagnostic investigation of patients with findings on screening and for screening patients with a family history of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer.

2,196 citations


Authors

Showing all 53431 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Bert Vogelstein247757332094
George M. Whitesides2401739269833
Hongjie Dai197570182579
Robert M. Califf1961561167961
Frank E. Speizer193636135891
Yusuke Nakamura1792076160313
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
Marc G. Caron17367499802
George M. Church172900120514
Steven P. Gygi172704129173
Lily Yeh Jan16246773655
Tobin J. Marks1591621111604
David W. Bates1591239116698
Alfred L. Goldberg15647488296
Charles M. Perou156573202951
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023203
2022769
20217,364
20207,015
20196,309
20185,651