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Institution

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

EducationBrussels, Belgium
About: Vrije Universiteit Brussel is a education organization based out in Brussels, Belgium. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 14295 authors who have published 38258 publications receiving 1203970 citations. The organization is also known as: VUB.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Katherine Amps1, Peter W. Andrews1, George Anyfantis2, Lyle Armstrong2, Stuart Avery3, Hossein Baharvand4, Julie C. Baker5, Duncan Baker6, Maria D. Barbadillo Muñoz7, Stephen J. Beil8, Nissim Benvenisty9, Dalit Ben-Yosef10, Juan Carlos Biancotti11, Alexis Bosman12, Romulo M. Brena8, Daniel R. Brison13, Gunilla Caisander, Marãa V. Camarasa14, Jieming Chen15, Eric Chiao5, Young Min Choi16, Andre Choo, D.M. Collins, Alan Colman3, Jeremy M. Crook3, George Q. Daley17, Anne Dalton6, Paul A. De Sousa18, Chris Denning7, J.M. Downie, Petr Dvorak19, Karen Dyer Montgomery20, Anis Feki, Angela Ford1, Victoria Fox8, Ana Maria Fraga21, Tzvia Frumkin10, Lin Ge22, Paul J. Gokhale1, Tamar Golan-Lev9, Hamid Gourabi4, Michal Gropp, Lu GuangXiu22, Aleš Hampl19, Katie Harron23, Lyn Healy, Wishva Herath15, Frida Holm24, Outi Hovatta24, Johan Hyllner, Maneesha S. Inamdar25, Astrid K. Irwanto15, Tetsuya Ishii26, Marisa Jaconi12, Ying Jin27, Susan J. Kimber14, Sergey Kiselev28, Barbara B. Knowles3, Oded Kopper9, Valeri Kukharenko, Anver Kuliev, Maria A. Lagarkova29, Peter W. Laird8, Majlinda Lako2, Andrew L. Laslett, Neta Lavon11, Dong Ryul Lee, Jeoung Eun Lee, Chunliang Li27, Linda S. Lim15, Tenneille Ludwig20, Yu Ma27, Edna Maltby6, Ileana Mateizel30, Yoav Mayshar9, Maria Mileikovsky, Stephen L. Minger31, Takamichi Miyazaki26, Shin Yong Moon16, Harry Moore1, Christine L. Mummery32, Andras Nagy, Norio Nakatsuji26, Kavita Narwani11, Steve Oh, Sun Kyung Oh16, Cia Olson33, Timo Otonkoski33, Fei Pan8, In-Hyun Park34, Steve Pells18, Martin F. Pera8, Lygia da Veiga Pereira21, Ouyang Qi22, Grace Selva Raj3, Benjamin Reubinoff, Alan Robins, Paul Robson15, Janet Rossant35, Ghasem Hosseini Salekdeh4, Thomas C. Schulz, Karen Sermon30, Jameelah Sheik Mohamed15, Hui Shen8, Eric S Sherrer, Kuldip S. Sidhu36, Shirani Sivarajah3, Heli Skottman37, Claudia Spits30, Glyn Stacey, Raimund Strehl, Nick Strelchenko, Hirofumi Suemori26, Bowen Sun27, Riitta Suuronen37, Kazutoshi Takahashi26, Timo Tuuri33, Parvathy Venu25, Yuri Verlinsky, Dorien Ward-van Oostwaard32, Daniel J. Weisenberger8, Yue Wu31, Shinya Yamanaka26, Lorraine E. Young7, Qi Zhou38 
TL;DR: Of these genes, BCL2L1 is a strong candidate for driving culture adaptation of ES cells, and single-nucleotide polymorphism analysis revealed that they included representatives of most major ethnic groups.
Abstract: The International Stem Cell Initiative analyzed 125 human embryonic stem (ES) cell lines and 11 induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell lines, from 38 laboratories worldwide, for genetic changes occurring during culture. Most lines were analyzed at an early and late passage. Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis revealed that they included representatives of most major ethnic groups. Most lines remained karyotypically normal, but there was a progressive tendency to acquire changes on prolonged culture, commonly affecting chromosomes 1, 12, 17 and 20. DNA methylation patterns changed haphazardly with no link to time in culture. Structural variants, determined from the SNP arrays, also appeared sporadically. No common variants related to culture were observed on chromosomes 1, 12 and 17, but a minimal amplicon in chromosome 20q11.21, including three genes expressed in human ES cells, ID1, BCL2L1 and HM13, occurred in >20% of the lines. Of these genes, BCL2L1 is a strong candidate for driving culture adaptation of ES cells.

506 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Khachatryan1, Albert M. Sirunyan1, Armen Tumasyan1, Wolfgang Adam  +2285 moreInstitutions (147)
TL;DR: In this paper, an improved jet energy scale corrections, based on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 19.7 fb^(-1) collected by the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 8 TeV, are presented.
Abstract: Improved jet energy scale corrections, based on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 19.7 fb^(-1) collected by the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 8 TeV, are presented. The corrections as a function of pseudorapidity η and transverse momentum p_T are extracted from data and simulated events combining several channels and methods. They account successively for the effects of pileup, uniformity of the detector response, and residual data-simulation jet energy scale differences. Further corrections, depending on the jet flavor and distance parameter (jet size) R, are also presented. The jet energy resolution is measured in data and simulated events and is studied as a function of pileup, jet size, and jet flavor. Typical jet energy resolutions at the central rapidities are 15–20% at 30 GeV, about 10% at 100 GeV, and 5% at 1 TeV. The studies exploit events with dijet topology, as well as photon+jet, Z+jet and multijet events. Several new techniques are used to account for the various sources of jet energy scale corrections, and a full set of uncertainties, and their correlations, are provided. The final uncertainties on the jet energy scale are below 3% across the phase space considered by most analyses (p_T > 30 GeV and 0|η| 30 GeV is reached, when excluding the jet flavor uncertainties, which are provided separately for different jet flavors. A new benchmark for jet energy scale determination at hadron colliders is achieved with 0.32% uncertainty for jets with p_T of the order of 165–330 GeV, and |η| < 0.8.

505 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
M. G. Aartsen1, K. Abraham2, Markus Ackermann, Jenni Adams3  +313 moreInstitutions (49)
TL;DR: In this paper, an isotropic, unbroken power-law flux with a normalization at 100 TeV neutrino energy of (0.90 -0.27 +0.30) × 10-18 Gev-1 cm-2 s-1 sr-1 and a hard spectral index of γ = 2.13 ± 0.13.
Abstract: The IceCube Collaboration has previously discovered a high-energy astrophysical neutrino flux using neutrino events with interaction vertices contained within the instrumented volume of the IceCube detector. We present a complementary measurement using charged current muon neutrino events where the interaction vertex can be outside this volume. As a consequence of the large muon range the effective area is significantly larger but the field of view is restricted to the Northern Hemisphere. IceCube data from 2009 through 2015 have been analyzed using a likelihood approach based on the reconstructed muon energy and zenith angle. At the highest neutrino energies between 194 TeV and 7.8 PeV a significant astrophysical contribution is observed, excluding a purely atmospheric origin of these events at 5.6s significance. The data are well described by an isotropic, unbroken power-law flux with a normalization at 100 TeV neutrino energy of (0.90 -0.27 +0.30) × 10-18 Gev-1 cm-2 s-1 sr-1and a hard spectral index of γ = 2.13 ± 0.13. The observed spectrum is harder in comparison to previous IceCube analyses with lower energy thresholds which may indicate a break in the astrophysical neutrino spectrum of unknown origin. The highest-energy event observed has a reconstructed muon energy of (4.5 ± 1.2) PeV which implies a probability of less than 0.005% for this event to be of atmospheric origin. Analyzing the arrival directions of all events with reconstructed muon energies above 200 TeV no correlation with known γ-ray sources was found. Using the high statistics of atmospheric neutrinos we report the current best constraints on a prompt atmospheric muon neutrino flux originating from charmed meson decays which is below 1.06 in units of the flux normalization of the model in Enberg et al.

503 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The first all-electron ab initio study of Young's modulus and Poisson ratio for a number of closed single-walled nanotubes is presented in this paper.

502 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that foreign genes are not only transferred but are also functionally expressed when the appropriate constructions are made using promoters known to be active in plant cells.
Abstract: A chimeric gene was constructed consisting of the promoter of the nopaline synthase gene of Agrobacterium tumefaciens and the structural gene of the aminoglycoside phosphotransferase derived from the transposon Tn5 (APH(3′)II) gene). This chimeric gene was recombined into the T-DNA of Agrobacterium. This plasmid was introduced into plant cells by means of the cocultivation method. Here we discusss the functional expression of the N0S-APH(3′)II gene in the resulting transformed cells.

499 citations


Authors

Showing all 14460 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
D. M. Strom1763167194314
Christopher M. Dobson1501008105475
Dario Bisello1402005107859
Giorgio Maggi135132390270
Jörg P. Rachen13340094766
Pascal Vanlaer133127091850
Freya Blekman133138889808
Jorgen D'Hondt132125789685
Tae Jeong Kim132142093959
Xavier Janssen132130986860
Matthias Ulrich Mozer131118587709
Valery Zhukov129125583330
Stephanie Beauceron129121386374
Steven Lowette128109478876
Yen-Jie Lee128124782542
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023124
2022296
20212,413
20202,195
20192,169
20182,125