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Institution

University of Valencia

EducationValencia, Spain
About: University of Valencia is a education organization based out in Valencia, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Neutrino. The organization has 27096 authors who have published 65669 publications receiving 1765689 citations. The organization is also known as: Universitat de València & UV.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: EsPal is a Web-accessible repository containing a comprehensive set of properties of Spanish words, based on an extensible set of data sources, beginning with a 300 million token written database and a 460 million token subtitle database.
Abstract: This article introduces EsPal: a Web-accessible repository containing a comprehensive set of properties of Spanish words. EsPal is based on an extensible set of data sources, beginning with a 300 million token written database and a 460 million token subtitle database. Properties available include word frequency, orthographic structure and neighborhoods, phonological structure and neighborhoods, and subjective ratings such as imageability. Subword structure properties are also available in terms of bigrams and trigrams, biphones, and bisyllables. Lemma and part-of-speech information and their corresponding frequencies are also indexed. The website enables users either to upload a set of words to receive their properties or to receive a set of words matching constraints on the properties. The properties themselves are easily extensible and will be added over time as they become available. It is freely available from the following website: http://www.bcbl.eu/databases/espal/ .

312 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fog water collection rates vary dramatically from site to site but yearly averages from 3 to 10 l m−2 of mesh per day are typical of operational projects.
Abstract: The collection of fog water is a simple and sustainable technology to obtain fresh water for afforestation, gardening, and as a drinking water source for human and animal consumption. In regions where fresh water is sparse and fog frequently occurs, it is feasible to set up a passive mesh system for fog water collection. The mesh is directly exposed to the atmosphere, and the foggy air is pushed through the mesh by the wind. Fog droplets are deposited on the mesh, combine to form larger droplets, and run down passing into a storage tank. Fog water collection rates vary dramatically from site to site but yearly averages from 3 to 10 l m−2 of mesh per day are typical of operational projects. The scope of this article is to review fog collection projects worldwide, to analyze factors of success, and to evaluate the prospects of this technology.

311 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These primer pairs are now available for use as markers in crop improvement and conservation efforts and the screening of sorghum genomic libraries by hybridization with SSR oligonucleotides.
Abstract: Simple sequence repeats (SSRs), also known as microsatellites, are highly variable DNA sequences that can be used as markers for the genetic analysis of plants. Three approaches were followed for the development of PCR primers for the amplification of DNA fragments containing SSRs from sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench]: a search for sorghum SSRs in public DNA databases; the use of SSR-specific primers developed in the Poaceae species maize (Zea mays L.) and seashore paspalum grass (Paspalum vaginatum Swartz); and the screening of sorghum genomic libraries by hybridization with SSR oligonucleotides. A total of 49 sorghum SSR-specific PCR primer pairs (two designed from GenBank SSR-containing sequences and 47 from the sequences of genomic clones) were screened on a panel of 17 sorghum and one maize accession. Ten primer pairs from paspalum and 90 from maize were also screened for polymorphism in sorghum. Length polymorphisms among amplification products were detected with 15 of these primer pairs, yielding diversity values ranging from 0.2 to 0.8 with an average diversity of 0.56. These primer pairs are now available for use as markers in crop improvement and conservation efforts.

310 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the occurrence, severity and clinical correlates of emotional lability in children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and examine factors contributing to EL and familiality of EL in youth with ADHD.
Abstract: Background: The goal of this study was to investigate the occurrence, severity and clinical correlates of emotional lability (EL) in children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and to examine factors contributing to EL and familiality of EL in youth with ADHD. Methods: One thousand, one hundred and eighty-six children with ADHD combined type and 1827 siblings (aged 6–18 years) were assessed for symptoms of EL, ADHD, associated psychopathology and comorbid psychiatric disorders with a structured diagnostic interview (PACS) as well as parent and teacher ratings of psychopathology (SDQ; CPRS-R:L; CTRS-R:L). Analyses of variance, regression analyses, ?2-tests or loglinear models were applied. Results: Mean age and gender-standardized ratings of EL in children with ADHD were >1.5 SD above the mean in normative samples. Severe EL (>75th percentile) was associated with more severe ADHD core symptoms, primarily hyperactive-impulsive symptoms, and more comorbid oppositional defiant, affective and substance use disorders. Age, hyperactive-impulsive, oppositional, and emotional symptoms accounted for 30% of EL variance; hyperactive-impulsive symptoms did not account for EL variance when coexisting oppositional and emotional problems were taken into account, but oppositional symptoms explained 12% of EL variance specifically. Severity of EL in probands increased the severity of EL in siblings, but not the prevalence rates of ADHD or ODD. EL and ADHD does not co-segregate within families. Conclusion: EL is a frequent clinical problem in children with ADHD. It is associated with increased severity of ADHD core symptoms, particularly hyperactivity-impulsivity, and more symptoms of comorbid psychopathology, primarily symptoms of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), but also affective symptoms, and substance abuse. EL in ADHD seems to be more closely related to ODD than to ADHD core symptoms, and is only partly explainable by the severity of ADHD core symptoms and associated psychopathology. Although EL symptoms are transmitted within families, EL in children with ADHD does not increase the risk of ADHD and ODD in their siblings.

310 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A switchable molecular device made by contacting individual nanoparticles based on spin-crossover molecules between nanometer-spaced electrodes is reported, confirming the existence of hysteretic spin crossover effects in a single nanoobject.
Abstract: The design of switchable nanodevices based on magnetic molecules has therefore remained a theoretical topic. [ 10–12 ] Here, we report a switchable molecular device made by contacting individual nanoparticles based on spin-crossover molecules between nanometer-spaced electrodes. This nanoscale device exhibits switching and memory effects near room temperature as a consequence of the intrinsic bistability of the spin-crossover nanoparticle. Thus, a sharp increase in the conductance is observed upon heating above ca. 350 K, together with the presence of a thermal hysteresis as large as 30 K for a single-particle device, after which the conductance switches back to the original value. This is a long-sought-for result, as it confi rms the existence of hysteretic spin crossover effects in a single nanoobject. [ 13–17 ] Interestingly for molecular spintronics, the spin crossover in this molecular nanodevice can also be induced by applying a voltage, showing that its magnetic state is controllable electrically. Spin-crossover metal complexes are one of the paradigmatic examples of magnetic molecular materials showing switching and bistability at the molecular level. [ 18 ] In these systems lowspin to high-spin transitions can be triggered through a variety of external stimuli (temperature, illumination, or pressure) [ 19 ]

310 citations


Authors

Showing all 27402 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
H. S. Chen1792401178529
Alvaro Pascual-Leone16596998251
Sabino Matarrese155775123278
Subir Sarkar1491542144614
Carlos Escobar148118495346
Marco Costa1461458105096
Carmen García139150396925
Javier Cuevas1381689103604
M. I. Martínez134125179885
Marco Aurelio Diaz134101593580
Avelino Corma134104989095
Kevin Lannon133165295436
Marina Cobal132107885437
Mogens Dam131110983717
Marcel Vos13199385194
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20251
2023140
2022487
20214,747
20204,696
20193,996