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Institution

University of Zurich

EducationZurich, Switzerland
About: University of Zurich is a education organization based out in Zurich, Switzerland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 50842 authors who have published 124042 publications receiving 5304521 citations. The organization is also known as: UZH & Uni Zurich.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
06 Jan 2006-Science
TL;DR: It is shown that strategic incentives are the key to answering the question of when “Economic Man” dominates the outcome of social interactions, and when bounded rationality or other-regarding preferences dominate.
Abstract: The canonical model in economics considers people to be rational and self-regarding. However, much evidence challenges this view, raising the question of when “Economic Man” dominates the outcome of social interactions, and when bounded rationality or other-regarding preferences dominate. Here we show that strategic incentives are the key to answering this question. A minority of self-regarding individuals can trigger a “noncooperative” aggregate outcome if their behavior generates incentives for the majority of other-regarding individuals to mimic the minority's behavior. Likewise, a minority of other-regarding individuals can generate a “cooperative” aggregate outcome if their behavior generates incentives for a majority of self-regarding people to behave cooperatively. Similarly, in strategic games, aggregate outcomes can be either far from or close to Nash equilibrium if players with high degrees of strategic thinking mimic or erase the effects of others who do very little strategic thinking. Recently developed theories of other-regarding preferences and bounded rationality explain these findings and provide better predictions of actual aggregate behavior than does traditional economic theory.

620 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this multicentre, multivendor trial, ROC analyses suggest perfusion-CMR as a valuable alternative to SPECT for CAD detection showing equal performance in the head-to-head comparison.
Abstract: AIMS: To determine in a multicentre, multivendor trial the diagnostic performance for perfusion-cardiac magnetic resonance (perfusion-CMR) in comparison with coronary X-ray angiography (CXA) and si ...

620 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Counterintuitively, thrombolysis did not reduce mortality or recurrent PE at 90 days, and IVC filters were associated with a reduction in 90-day mortality.
Abstract: Background— Acute massive pulmonary embolism (PE) carries an exceptionally high mortality rate. We explored how often adjunctive therapies, particularly thrombolysis and inferior vena caval (IVC) filter placement, were performed and how these therapies affected the clinical outcome of patients with massive PE. Methods and Results— Among 2392 patients with acute PE and known systolic arterial blood pressure at presentation, from the International Cooperative Pulmonary Embolism Registry (ICOPER), 108 (4.5%) had massive PE, defined as a systolic arterial pressure <90 mm Hg, and 2284 (95.5%) had non–massive PE with a systolic arterial pressure ≥90 mm Hg. PE was first diagnosed at autopsy in 16 patients (15%) with massive PE and in 29 patients (1%) with non–massive PE (P<0.001). The 90-day mortality rates were 52.4% (95% CI, 43.3% to 62.1%) and 14.7% (95% CI, 13.3% to 16.2%), respectively. In-hospital bleeding complications occurred in 17.6% versus 9.7% and recurrent PE within 90 days in 12.6% and 7.6%, respec...

619 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a stepwise multiple testing procedure is proposed to asymptotically control the familywise error rate at a desired level, which implicitly captures the joint dependence structure of the test statistics, which results in increased ability to detect alternative hypotheses.
Abstract: It is common in econometric applications that several hypothesis tests are carried out at the same time. The problem then becomes how to decide which hypotheses to reject, accounting for the multitude of tests. In this paper, we suggest a stepwise multiple testing procedure which asymptotically controls the familywise error rate at a desired level. Compared to related single-step methods, our procedure is more powerful in the sense that it often will reject more false hypotheses. Unlike some stepwise methods, our method implicitly captures the joint dependence structure of the test statistics, which results in increased ability to detect alternative hypotheses. We prove our method asymptotically controls the familywise error rate under minimal assumptions. Some simulation studies show the improvements of our methods over previous proposals. We also provide an application to a set of real data.

619 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An increased AtSERK1 level is sufficient to confer embryogenic competence in culture and demonstrate its role during establishment of somatic embryogenesis in culture.
Abstract: We report here the isolation of the Arabidopsis SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE 1 (AtSERK1) gene and we demonstrate its role during establishment of somatic embryogenesis in culture. The AtSERK1 gene is highly expressed during embryogenic cell formation in culture and during early embryogenesis. The AtSERK1 gene is first expressed in planta during megasporogenesis in the nucleus of developing ovules, in the functional megaspore, and in all cells of the embryo sac up to fertilization. After fertilization, AtSERK1 expression is seen in all cells of the developing embryo until the heart stage. After this stage, AtSERK1 expression is no longer detectable in the embryo or in any part of the developing seed. Low expression is detected in adult vascular tissue. Ectopic expression of the full-length AtSERK1 cDNA under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter did not result in any altered plant phenotype. However, seedlings that overexpressed the AtSERK1 mRNA exhibited a 3- to 4-fold increase in efficiency for initiation of somatic embryogenesis. Thus, an increased AtSERK1 level is sufficient to confer embryogenic competence in culture.

619 citations


Authors

Showing all 51384 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard A. Flavell2311328205119
Peer Bork206697245427
Thomas C. Südhof191653118007
Stuart H. Orkin186715112182
Ruedi Aebersold182879141881
Tadamitsu Kishimoto1811067130860
Stanley B. Prusiner16874597528
Yang Yang1642704144071
Tomas Hökfelt158103395979
Dan R. Littman157426107164
Hans Lassmann15572479933
Matthias Egger152901184176
Lorenzo Bianchini1521516106970
Robert M. Strieter15161273040
Ashok Kumar1515654164086
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023265
20221,039
20218,997
20208,398
20197,336
20186,832