Institution
Washington State University
Education•Pullman, Washington, United States•
About: Washington State University is a education organization based out in Pullman, Washington, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 26947 authors who have published 57736 publications receiving 2341509 citations. The organization is also known as: WSU & Wazzu.
Topics: Population, Gene, Catalysis, Context (language use), Poison control
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A theoretical model of resident support for tourism that is based on the social exchange theory was shown to be valid regardless of the distance between residents’ homes and tourism attractions.
475 citations
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TL;DR: The application of genetic engineering methods affords opportunities for researchers to apply knowledge gained about plant lipid metabolism toward enhanced use of plant oils as abundant and renewable sources of reduced carbon.
Abstract: The mechanisms that regulate plant lipid metabolism determine the dietary and industrial value of storage oils found in economically important species and may control the ability of many plants to survive exposure to temperature extremes. Many of the problems researchers have in defining the pathways, enzymes, and genes involved in plant lipid metabolism appear to be amenable to analysis by genetic approaches. Mutants with alterations in membrane lipid composition have also been used to study the structural and adaptive roles of lipids. The application of genetic engineering methods affords opportunities for researchers to apply knowledge gained about plant lipid metabolism toward enhanced use of plant oils as abundant and renewable sources of reduced carbon.
474 citations
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TL;DR: 3D NoC architectures are evaluated and demonstrate their superior functionality in terms of throughput, latency, energy dissipation and wiring area overhead compared to traditional 2D implementations.
Abstract: The Network-on-Chip (NoC) paradigm has emerged as a revolutionary methodology for integrating a very high number of intellectual property (IP) blocks in a single die. The achievable performance benefit arising out of adopting NoCs is constrained by the performance limitation imposed by the metal wire, which is the physical realization of communication channels. With technology scaling, only depending on the material innovation will extend the lifetime of conventional interconnect systems a few technology generations. According to International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) for the longer term, new interconnect paradigms are in need. The conventional two dimensional (2D) integrated circuit (IC) has limited floor-planning choices, and consequently it limits the performance enhancements arising out of NoC architectures. Three dimensional (3D) ICs are capable of achieving better performance, functionality, and packaging density compared to more traditional planar ICs. On the other hand, NoC is an enabling solution for integrating large numbers of embedded cores in a single die. 3D NoC architectures combine the benefits of these two new domains to offer an unprecedented performance gain. In this paper we evaluate the performance of 3D NoC architectures and demonstrate their superior functionality in terms of throughput, latency, energy dissipation and wiring area overhead compared to traditional 2D implementations.
474 citations
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TL;DR: The potential efficacy of lignin in biopolymer based green hydrogels with particular emphasis on synthesis, characterization and applications is reviewed.
474 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine new agricultural cooperative organizational models from an ownership rights perspective and propose a typology of discrete organizational models, in which the traditional cooperative structure and the investor-oriented firm are characterized as polar forms.
Abstract: This article examines new agricultural cooperative organizational models from an ownership rights perspective. The article adopts a definition of ownership rights comprising both residual claim and control rights. We argue that new cooperative organizational models differ in how ownership rights are assigned to the economic agents (members, patrons, and investors) tied contractually to the firm. The article proposes a typology of discrete organizational models, in which the traditional cooperative structure and the investor-oriented firm are characterized as polar forms. The typology also includes five nontraditional models that cooperatives may adopt to ameliorate perceived financial constraints. Agricultural cooperatives have played an important economic role in market
472 citations
Authors
Showing all 27183 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Anil K. Jain | 183 | 1016 | 192151 |
Martin Karplus | 163 | 831 | 138492 |
Herbert A. Simon | 157 | 745 | 194597 |
Suvadeep Bose | 154 | 960 | 129071 |
Rajesh Kumar | 149 | 4439 | 140830 |
Kevin Murphy | 146 | 728 | 120475 |
Jonathan D. G. Jones | 129 | 417 | 80908 |
Douglas E. Soltis | 127 | 612 | 67161 |
Peter W. Kalivas | 123 | 428 | 52445 |
Chris Somerville | 122 | 284 | 45742 |
Pamela S. Soltis | 120 | 543 | 61080 |
Yuehe Lin | 118 | 641 | 55399 |
Howard I. Maibach | 116 | 1821 | 60765 |
Jizhong Zhou | 115 | 766 | 48708 |
Farshid Guilak | 110 | 480 | 41327 |