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Institution

University of York

EducationYork, York, United Kingdom
About: University of York is a education organization based out in York, York, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 22089 authors who have published 56925 publications receiving 2458285 citations. The organization is also known as: York University & Ebor..


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A coherent-state network protocol able to achieve remarkably high key rates at metropolitan distances, in fact three orders of magnitude higher than those currently achieved, is designed and proposed.
Abstract: Quantum cryptography achieves a formidable task—the remote distribution of secret keys by exploiting the fundamental laws of physics. Quantum cryptography is now headed towards solving the practical problem of constructing scalable and secure quantum networks. A significant step in this direction has been the introduction of measurement-device independence, where the secret key between two parties is established by the measurement of an untrusted relay. Unfortunately, although qubit-implemented protocols can reach long distances, their key rates are typically very low, unsuitable for the demands of a metropolitan network. Here we show, theoretically and experimentally, that a solution can come from the use of continuous-variable systems. We design a coherent-state network protocol able to achieve remarkably high key rates at metropolitan distances, in fact three orders of magnitude higher than those currently achieved. Our protocol could be employed to build high-rate quantum networks where devices securely connect to nearby access points or proxy servers. An end-to-end continuous-variable quantum key distribution system with an untrusted node is proposed. A proof-of-principle experiment shows that 10−1 secret key bits per relay use are distributed at 4 dB loss, corresponding to 20 km in optical fibre.

420 citations

Book
07 Oct 1988
TL;DR: In emotionally focused couples therapy, intrapsychic and interpersonal perspectives are combined; interactional positions are assumed to be maintained by strong, primary, emotional responses and by the way interactions are structured and organized as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: This book demonstrates the power of emotional experience in relationships and how this power can be used to reconstruct intimate bonds. In emotionally focused couples therapy, intrapsychic and interpersonal perspectives are combined; interactional positions are assumed to be maintained by strong, primary, emotional responses and by the way interactions are structured and organized. Hence, the goal of emotionally focused therapy is to enable a couple to change the habitual positions they assume in relation to each other and to change the way each partner experiences the relationship.

419 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper reported an experiment that elicits subjects' initial responses to 16 dominance-solvable two-person guessing games and found that most subjects understood the games and sought to maximize payoffs, but many had simplified models of others' decisions that led to systematic deviations from equilibrium.
Abstract: This paper reports an experiment that elicits subjects' initial responses to 16 dominance-solvable two-person guessing games. The structure is publicly announced except for varying payoff parameters, to which subjects are given free access. Varying the parameters allows very strong separation of the behavior implied by leading decision rules. Subjects' decisions and searches show that most subjects understood the games and sought to maximize payoffs, but many had simplified models of others' decisions that led to systematic deviations from equilibrium. The predictable component of their deviations is well explained by a structural nonequilibrium model of initial responses based on level-k thinking.

419 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Spindle activity appears to be particularly important for overnight integration of new memories with existing neocortical knowledge, and was associated with overnight lexical integration in the sleep group, but not with gains in recall rate or recognition speed of the novel words themselves.
Abstract: Sleep spindle activity has been associated with improvements in procedural and declarative memory. Here, for the first time, we looked at the role of spindles in the integration of newly learned information with existing knowledge, contrasting this with explicit recall of the new information. Two groups of participants learned novel spoken words (e.g., cathedruke) that overlapped phonologically with familiar words (e.g., cathedral). The sleep group was exposed to the novel words in the evening, followed by an initial test, a polysomnographically monitored night of sleep, and a second test in the morning. The wake group was exposed and initially tested in the morning and spent a retention interval of similar duration awake. Finally, both groups were tested a week later at the same circadian time to control for possible circadian effects. In the sleep group, participants recalled more words and recognized them faster after sleep, whereas in the wake group such changes were not observed until the final test 1 week later. Following acquisition of the novel words, recognition of the familiar words was slowed in both groups, but only after the retention interval, indicating that the novel words had been integrated into the mental lexicon following consolidation. Importantly, spindle activity was associated with overnight lexical integration in the sleep group, but not with gains in recall rate or recognition speed of the novel words themselves. Spindle activity appears to be particularly important for overnight integration of new memories with existing neocortical knowledge.

418 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The omics revolution is identifying many novel enzymes and paradigms for biomass deconstruction, but more emphasis on function is required, particularly for enzyme cocktails, in which LPMOs may play an important role.

417 citations


Authors

Showing all 22432 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Cyrus Cooper2041869206782
Eric R. Kandel184603113560
Ian J. Deary1661795114161
Elio Riboli1581136110499
Claude Bouchard1531076115307
Robert Plomin151110488588
Kevin J. Gaston15075085635
John R. Hodges14981282709
Myrna M. Weissman149772108259
Jeffrey A. Lieberman14570685306
Howard L. Weiner144104791424
Dan J. Stein1421727132718
Jedd D. Wolchok140713123336
Bernard Henrissat139593100002
Joseph E. LeDoux13947891500
Network Information
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023185
2022466
20213,259
20203,377
20193,032
20182,810