Institution
University of Warsaw
Education•Warsaw, Poland•
About: University of Warsaw is a education organization based out in Warsaw, Poland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 20832 authors who have published 56617 publications receiving 1185084 citations. The organization is also known as: Uniwersytet Warszawski & Warsaw University.
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Queensland University of Technology1, University of Queensland2, Victoria University of Wellington3, University of Melbourne4, University of Warsaw5, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya6, University of Iceland7, Federal University of Paraíba8, University of Surrey9, University of Gothenburg10, Simón Bolívar University11, Universidad de Sonora12, Complutense University of Madrid13, University of Toulouse14, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg15, Nagoya University of Commerce & Business16, University of Zurich17, University of Groningen18, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile19, National Research University – Higher School of Economics20, University of Oslo21, University of Pretoria22, University of Ghana23, University of Exeter24, University of La Frontera25, California State University San Marcos26
TL;DR: This paper investigated whether potential co-benefits of addressing climate change could motivate pro-environmental behavior around the world for both those convinced and unconvinced that climate change is real.
Abstract: Personal and political action on climate change is traditionally thought to be motivated by people accepting its reality and importance. However, convincing the public that climate change is real faces powerful ideological obstacles1, 2, 3, 4, and climate change is slipping in public importance in many countries5, 6. Here we investigate a different approach, identifying whether potential co-benefits of addressing climate change7 could motivate pro-environmental behaviour around the world for both those convinced and unconvinced that climate change is real. We describe an integrated framework for assessing beliefs about co-benefits8, distinguishing social conditions (for example, economic development, reduced pollution or disease) and community character (for example, benevolence, competence). Data from all inhabited continents (24 countries; 6,196 participants) showed that two co-benefit types, Development (economic and scientific advancement) and Benevolence (a more moral and caring community), motivated public, private and financial actions to address climate change to a similar degree as believing climate change is important. Critically, relationships were similar for both convinced and unconvinced participants, showing that co-benefits can motivate action across ideological divides. These relationships were also independent of perceived climate change importance, and could not be explained by political ideology, age, or gender. Communicating co-benefits could motivate action on climate change where traditional approaches have stalled.
226 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a pharmacological chaperone, 11-cis-7-ring retinal, was used to induce the in vivo folding of P23H-opsin and the rescued protein formed pigment, acquired mature glycosylation, and was transported to the cell surface.
226 citations
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TL;DR: Evidence accrued over the past two decades from infants and adults, and from other primates, that informs a two-process theory of the development of face processing in humans is reviewed.
226 citations
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Vardan Khachatryan, Albert M. Sirunyan, Armen Tumasyan, Wolfgang Adam1 +2184 more•Institutions (150)
TL;DR: In this article, the W and Z boson production cross sections in pp collisions at 7 TeV are presented, based on 2.9 inverse picobarns of data recorded by the CMS detector at the LHC.
Abstract: Measurements of inclusive W and Z boson production cross sections in pp collisions at sqrt(s)=7 TeV are presented, based on 2.9 inverse picobarns of data recorded by the CMS detector at the LHC. The measurements, performed in the electron and muon decay channels, are combined to give sigma(pp to WX) times B(W to muon or electron + neutrino) = 9.95 \pm 0.07(stat.) \pm 0.28(syst.) \pm 1.09(lumi.) nb and sigma(pp to ZX) times B(Z to oppositely charged muon or electron pairs) = 0.931 \pm 0.026(stat.) \pm 0.023(syst.) \pm 0.102(lumi.) nb. Theoretical predictions, calculated at the next-to-next-to-leading order in QCD using recent parton distribution functions, are in agreement with the measured cross sections. Ratios of cross sections, which incur an experimental systematic uncertainty of less than 4%, are also reported.
225 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a measurement of the deuteron spin-dependent structure function g 1 d based on the data collected by the COMPASS experiment at CERN during the years 2002-2004 is presented.
225 citations
Authors
Showing all 21191 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Alexander Malakhov | 139 | 1486 | 99556 |
Emmanuelle Perez | 138 | 1550 | 99016 |
Piotr Zalewski | 135 | 1388 | 89976 |
Krzysztof Doroba | 133 | 1440 | 89029 |
Hector F. DeLuca | 133 | 1303 | 69395 |
Krzysztof M. Gorski | 132 | 380 | 105912 |
Igor Golutvin | 131 | 1282 | 88559 |
Jan Krolikowski | 131 | 1289 | 83994 |
Michal Szleper | 130 | 1238 | 82036 |
Anatoli Zarubin | 129 | 1204 | 86435 |
Malgorzata Kazana | 129 | 1175 | 81106 |
Artur Kalinowski | 129 | 1162 | 81906 |
Predrag Milenovic | 129 | 1185 | 81144 |
Marcin Konecki | 128 | 1178 | 79392 |
Karol Bunkowski | 128 | 1192 | 79455 |