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SCImago
Q1
WOS
Q1
Impact factor
3.5
SJR
1.268
CiteScore
8.4
Categories
Automotive Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
Areas
Engineering
Years of issue
1972-2025
journal names
Vehicle System Dynamics
VEHICLE SYST DYN
Top-3 citing journals
Top-3 organizations

Southwest Jiaotong University
(314 publications)

Polytechnic University of Milan
(105 publications)

Delft University of Technology
(76 publications)

Southwest Jiaotong University
(187 publications)

Polytechnic University of Milan
(30 publications)

Tongji University
(28 publications)
Top-3 countries
Most cited in 5 years
Found
Publications found: 227
Q1

Resolution agreement in German and Dutch: implications for person feature decomposition
Driemel I.
Abstract
DP-conjunctions with a mismatch in person features call for additional resolution rules to determine the values the agreement target has to copy. Across languages, resolution for person features typically follows a hierarchy of the form 1
$$\succ $$
≻
2
$$\succ $$
≻
3 —with some well-known exceptions, namely German and Dutch coordinations conjoining 2nd and 3rd person which allow for both agreement options. This paper takes a closer look at resolution agreement in German, Dutch, Norwegian, Swedish, and Icelandic. The German(ic) anomaly provides evidence for the presence of an underlying binary feature system and the need for set union as a resolution mechanism. The pattern is derived within the framework of Distributed Morphology where vocabulary insertion happens late and is thereby sensitive to decomposed and unified feature sets. Crucial for the account is an independently motivated impoverishment rule that tracks the absence of 1st person inclusive exponents in Germanic.
Q1

2-1-3 orders in Dutch verb clusters
Ackema P., Neeleman A.
A generalization that has emerged in the literature on verb clusters in West Germanic languages is that so-called 2-1-3 orders (where verb n selects verb n+1) are absent with core clustering verbs. In this paper we show that Dutch permits 2-1-3 order as an optional variant of the more widely acknowledged 1-2-3 order. The 2-1-3 order is subject to a range of restrictions involving the lexical items in the cluster, the morphological form of these items, whether other elements intervene, and where focus is placed. We argue that these restrictions are best understood if the 2-1-3 order is derived from an underlying 1-2-3 cluster through a post-syntactic inversion rule. This rule shares various properties with other inversion rules but cannot be reduced entirely to a familiar rule type.
Q1

Suffixation under adjacency: the case of Icelandic the-support
Ingason A.K.
AbstractThis paper argues in favor of the hypothesis that there are two definite articles in natural language, a weak article which expresses uniqueness and a strong article which expresses anaphoricity. The study is based on the distribution of definite articles in Icelandic, and they are found to alternate along the same empirical dimension as weak and strong articles in German. Furthermore, the Icelandic pattern manifests a structural interaction which is similar to English do-support, and we refer to it as the-support. We argue that the similarities between do-support and the-support suggest that studies of the two phenomena can benefit from considering them to be related at a deep abstract level. Thus, consequences ensue for the theory of suffixation under adjecency.
Q1

Long extraction in German: banned, but still alive
Bader M., Koukouloti V.
AbstractLong extraction, that is, the displacement of a constituent across a clause boundary, is considered a process of broad applicability. This view is challenged by the claim that extracting a phrase from a that-clause into a relative clause is ungrammatical in German. Since the evidence for this claim is extremely limited, we ran three acceptability experiments investigating long extraction in German. As expected from a large range of studies on long extraction in German, long extraction was judged as less acceptable than corresponding sentences without long extraction. Importantly, long extraction was equally acceptable across the three contexts that were tested—relative clauses, embedded questions and main clause questions. Our experiments, thus, show that long extraction applies across different structural contexts in German, as expected if long extraction is a general syntactic process. In addition, this paper presents new evidence concerning the sources of individual variation with regard to the acceptability of long extraction. First, we confirm that long extraction gets less acceptable when going from the South to the North of the German speaking area. Second, we tested whether individual participants differ with regard to how easily they accept non-standard constructions. To this end, we ran an additional experiment on verb-cluster formation, including sentences that are ungrammatical according to prescriptive grammar but that are, nevertheless, accepted by many speakers of German. The acceptability of long extraction correlates with the acceptability of non-standard verb clusters even when regional background is controlled for.
Q1

The decline of feminine gender: a cross-dialectal study of seven Norwegian dialects
van Baal Y., Eik R., Solbakken H., Lohndal T.
This paper presents a cross-dialectal study of grammatical gender in Norwegian nominal phrases. Specifically, we investigate the decline of the feminine gender in three age groups across seven different dialects. The dialects vary in their morphological richness of gender marking: some dialects traditionally have more distinctive marking of the feminine gender. With an elicited production experiment, we investigate gender marking on the indefinite determiner and the definite suffix. We find that feminine gender is in decline in all dialects, but there are clear differences between the locations and between age groups. The feminine indefinite determiner ei is replaced by the masculine en at different rates and to a different degree in the various dialects. We furthermore find that the feminine definite suffix -a is retained in all locations except for Stavanger. We argue that the decline of the feminine gender can be explained by an interplay between the morphological richness of the given dialect and dialect contact. The former helps to retain the feminine as a separate category, while the latter accelerates the loss of the feminine.
Q1

Nominal VP anaphora in Scandinavian and English
Weir A.
AbstractThis paper investigates the properties of nominal phrases and demonstratives used as verbal anaphora in Norwegian, Danish, English, and Scots-English, e.g. English Can John make good curry? – That he can; Norwegian Anja ligger godt an, det samme gjør Madelène lit. ‘Anja is in a good position, Madelène does the same [thing]’. Following Lødrup (Proceedings of NELS 24, 1994), Houser et al. (Proceedings of WECOL 34, 2007), Bentzen et al. (J Comp Ger Linguist 16:91–125, 2013), these anaphoric expressions are argued to be surface anaphora and to conceal elided vPs. Contrary to previous analyses, the nominal phrases are argued to themselves be contributing meaning beyond the vPs they conceal; they are argued to be overt background arguments for an ellipsis-licensing head with semantics similar to Rooth’s ∼ operator (Nat Lang Semant 1(1):75–116, 1992). The paper also explores cross-linguistic variation in the discourse/antecedence conditions on such anaphora, and their fronting behavior. In Danish and (general) English, such anaphora must generally topicalize, whereas in Norwegian and Scots-English, they can more freely appear in situ (in post-auxiliary position). Developing Mikkelsen’s (J Linguist 51(3):595–643, 2015) analysis of Danish det, this behavior is encoded as a feature [uTop] which must be checked; Norwegian is argued to have more possibilities to check this feature in situ than Danish, while in Scots-English, that is argued to be a propositional anaphor, lacking the relevant feature.
Q1

Unmarkedness of the coronal nasal in Alemannic
Noelliste E., Kniess T.
AbstractIn Alemannic dialects of German, [n] is particularly vulnerable to assimilation, deletion, and epenthesis. Although these changes are not necessarily uniform across all Alemannic varieties, the Alemannic dialect areas all exhibit some, if not all, of these processes. In this article, we present data from a diverse array of Alemannic dialects and show that [n] behaves similarly throughout Alemannic, assimilating to the place of following stops, deleting word-finally, and repairing hiatus through epenthesis. We contend that coronal [n] is interacting with so many processes because it is unmarked in terms of place and manner. This paper contributes to the phonological literature on dialectology and Markedness Theory. First, by considering similar processes which occur across multiple Alemannic dialects, we show how Alemannic prefers eliminating or modifying word-final [n]. Second, this analysis gives insight into theories of segment (un)markedness; thus, the data presented in this paper support descriptions of unmarked segments as undergoing assimilation, deletion, and epenthesis, while they challenge markedness accounts by scholars who bar [n] as an epenthetic segment. Third, we provide data for a language family in which one segment undergoes all three processes of assimilation, deletion, and epenthesis; this is unprecedented in the literature on unmarked segments, which typically focuses on languages which possess only one of these three processes.
Q1

Root participles: directive, commissive, expressive and representative participles in Germanic root configurations
Wegner D.
AbstractThe present paper investigates participial root configurations, i.e. participial clauses that are grammatically independent of a host clause. Unlike previous work, which has focussed on either directive or (non-directive) performative uses of so-called past participles (i.e. participles that have passive and/or perfect(ive) interpretations), the present paper establishes a typology of ‘root participles’ in Germanic and contrasts the properties of four main types: (1) directive (RPdir), (2) expressive (RPexp), (3) commissive (RPcom), (4) representative root participles (RPrep). The main claim with respect to the properties of these distinct types is that they differ in terms of whether they include a verbal or an adjectival (passive) participle. In fact, arguments based on argument structure, orientation, aspect, and adverbial modification are presented to substantiate the claim that types (1) and (2) are formed with verbal and types (3) and (4) with adjectival participles. Additionally, the distinct types will be shown to differ in their status of either being non-sentential (i.e. structurally different from potential clausal counterparts) or merely elliptical (just phonologically reduced): types (1) and (3) can be shown to be non-sentential and hence receive a dedicated syntactic analysis, where special attention is paid to the contribution of the (imperative vs. declarative) left periphery.
Q1

The morphosyntax of Gothic preverb compounds: incorporation and applicativisation
Tan T.L.
AbstractGothic preverb compounds illustrate several interesting characteristics, including multiple preverb stacking, idiomatisation, tmesis (i.e., separation by clitics), and P-copying (i.e., multiple pronunciation of the preverb). This paper is a close examination of the morphosyntax of these compounds, highlighting novel empirical generalisations about the Gothic language with key theoretical implications for our understanding of Germanic complex verbs and the alternations they participate in. In particular, this paper proposes a structural distinction between preverb compounds which are obligatorily semantically transparent and those which are optionally idiomatic. In arguing that transparent compounds involve the mechanism of preposition incorporation and m-merger, paralleling recent accounts of clitic doubling, while idiomatic compounds involve a thematic high applicative projection, this paper captures nuanced differences in these compounds’ case assignment and argument licensing behaviour. These structural differences will be shown to derive these two compound types’ constrained interaction with the aforementioned phenomena of stacking, tmesis, and copying. In addition, this paper compares Gothic complex verbs to their cross-linguistic correlates within and beyond Germanic, whilst also providing a diachronic pathway for the development of (multiple) preverb compounds.
Q1

Root suppletion in Swedish as contextual allomorphy
Adamson L.J.
AbstractThe present article provides a case study of the forms corresponding to the meaning ‘small’ in Swedish, which exhibit a number-based suppletive alternation: descriptively, liten appears in the singular while små appears in the plural. We demonstrate that this alternation is best treated as contextual allomorphy, and provide six arguments that favor this account over a plausible alternative, according to which the forms realize two distinct roots with different lexical semantics. We situate a Distributed Morphology-based account of the alternation within the broader context of inflection in the language, and address challenges and complications to the allomorphy approach from outside of the root’s ‘typical’ adjectival contexts, including adverbs and compounding. This study supports the existence of root suppletion conditioned by inflectional features, and has implications for our understanding of locality conditions on root suppletion as well as contextual allomorphy more broadly.
Q1

The acquisition of grammatical alternates: a comparison of Italian and Norwegian possessives
Velnić M.
AbstractPossessive alternates (prenominal and postnominal) have mirrored properties in Italian and Norwegian when taking into consideration frequency, derivation, and markedness; i.e., the variant that is base-generated in one language is considered the derived one in the other language. Thus, in both languages there is a variant used for unmarked contexts (i.e., topic) and for marked contexts (i.e., contrast). Previous studies have shown that Italian children acquire the use of the variants with ease, whereas Norwegian children were found to overuse the marked variant, even in unmarked contexts. Here, we reanalyse the co-occurrences of the possessive and the noun in the monolingual corpora for the two languages available on CHILDES, by focusing more attentively on the contextual use of the variants, to reveal whether the same principles underly the acquisition process. Our findings contradict the previous claims on the acquisition of Italian but are in line with the previous findings for Norwegian. Both groups of children overuse the marked but base-generated variant, indicating the relevance of syntactic economy in language acquisition.
Q1

Giving content to expletive es in German
Hinterhölzl R.
AbstractThe present paper proposes an alternative analysis of so-called expletive es in German. It is argued that es has semantic content that serves to anchor the utterance in the context. In particular, I argue that es constitutes a weak demonstrative element binding a situation argument. The account gets rid of the assumption that the relevant head in the clause is endowed with an EPP-feature and restores the original principle underlying it, namely the requirement that every predicate needs a contentful subject argument it can be predicated of. The account also explains in more depth the obligatory and optional occurrences of es and proposes that there are essentially two occurrences of es to distinguish in terms of their syntactic properties.
Q1

Definiteness marking in American Norwegian: a unique pattern among the Scandinavian languages
van Baal Y.
AbstractThis paper examines definiteness marking in American Norwegian (AmNo), a heritage variety of Norwegian spoken in the US. The description adds another language to the much-studied variation within Scandinavian nominal phrases. It builds on established syntactic analysis of Scandinavian and investigates aspects that are (un)like Norwegian spoken in the homeland. A central finding is that the core syntax of Norwegian noun phrases is retained in AmNo, while the morphophonological spell-out is sometimes different. Indefinite determiners, for example, are obligatory in AmNo, but some speakers produce them with non-homeland-like gender agreement. One systematic change is observed: double definiteness has been partially lost. The typical AmNo modified definite phrase lacks the prenominal determiner that is obligatory for varieties in Norway. I argue that this is a syntactic change which allows the realization of D to be optional. This is a pattern not found in the other Scandinavian languages. At the same time, this innovative structure in AmNo is not like English, the dominant language of the AmNo speakers. This demonstrates heritage language change that is distinct from both the homeland language and the dominant language.
Q1

Ordering discontinuous $$\varvec{\varphi }$$-feature agree: verbal -s in North Eastern English
Fritzsche R.
AbstractNorth Eastern English differs from Standard English with respect to agreement: According to the Northern Subject Rule, 3sg agreement marking (verbal -s) occurs on verbs in clauses with non-3sg subjects provided that they are not personal pronouns adjacent to the verb. However, data from the Diachronic Electronic Corpus of Tyneside English shows that verbal -s also does not occur with non-adjacent personal pronouns subjects in contemporary North Eastern English. I argue that verbal -s with non-pronominal non-3sg subjects follows from two conceptual assumptions: firstly, the requirement to order feature-driven elementary operations and secondly, splitting up $$\upvarphi $$
φ
-Agree into two separate operations (i.e., person and number Agree). The difference in agreement between North Eastern English and Standard English stems from the different ordering of features on T. In Standard English, person and number probes are ordered before the structure building feature, which triggers movement. In the North Eastern English order, however, the structure-building feature intervenes between the two probe features. The full DP/pronoun split is explained by different kinds of movement: In the case of a full DP, subject movement to Spec/TP bleeds number agreement and verbal -s emerges, while pronominal subjects remain in the c-command domain of T because they head-move to T.
Q1

Phrasal Proper Names in German and Norwegian
Julien M., Roehrs D.
AbstractThis paper discusses the morpho-syntax of phrasal proper names like Deutsche Bahn ‘German Railway’ and Norske Skog ‘Norwegian Forest’ in German and Norwegian. As regards determiner elements, there are three types of phrasal proper names in German: some proper names do not have a definite article, some do, and yet others exhibit a possessive. Depending on the syntactic context, the first two types pattern the same as regards the presence or absence of the article but contrast with the third, where the possessive is always present. It is proposed that proper names in German vary in their structure as regards the presence of the DP-level: unlike articles, possessives have a referential marker, and a DP is obligatorily projected with the latter element. Norwegian is different. While proper names in Norwegian also vary in the presence or absence of determiners, there is no flexibility—determiners are always present or always absent, independent of the syntactic context. It is proposed that unlike in German, the DP-level in Norwegian is always present. As argued by Roehrs (Glossa J Gen Linguist, 5(1):1–38, 2020, https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.1267), phrasal proper names involve a regular syntactic derivation. Given that elements of regular DPs are sensitive to definiteness in Norwegian, it is proposed that Norwegian proper names involve an obligatory definiteness feature. As this feature surfaces in the DP-level, the latter must be present in that language in all instances. Besides this cross-linguistic difference, we document that phrasal PN may show features of recursivity evidenced most clearly in Norwegian.
Top-100
Citing journals
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Vehicle System Dynamics
11250 citations, 13.19%
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Elsevier
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|
|
American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS)
31 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Techno-Press
31 citations, 0.04%
|
|
Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan (IEE Japan)
30 citations, 0.04%
|
|
University of Zilina
29 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Tech Science Press
29 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Japan Society of Civil Engineers
27 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Index Copernicus
26 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan Inc
26 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Korean Society for Railway
25 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Shanghai Jiaotong University Press
24 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Research Square Platform LLC
24 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Institute of Control, Robotics and Systems
23 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Universitat Politecnica de Valencia
22 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Eco-Vector LLC
19 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Science Alert
19 citations, 0.02%
|
|
18 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Ken-yusha, Inc.
17 citations, 0.02%
|
|
American Physical Society (APS)
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
16 citations, 0.02%
|
|
proceedings of the american control conference
15 citations, 0.02%
|
|
American Chemical Society (ACS)
14 citations, 0.02%
|
|
University of Suceava
13 citations, 0.02%
|
|
China Science Publishing & Media
13 citations, 0.02%
|
|
King Saud University
12 citations, 0.01%
|
|
OAE Publishing Inc.
12 citations, 0.01%
|
|
The Society of Instrument and Control Engineers
10 citations, 0.01%
|
|
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM)
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Institute of Technology and Production Management University of J.E. Purkyne
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Institut za Istrazivanja I Projektovanja u Privredi
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE)
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Korean Society of Automotive Engineers
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Annual Reviews
9 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
8 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Korean Society Rheology
8 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Riga Technical University
8 citations, 0.01%
|
|
International Association of Traffic and Safety Sciences
8 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Optica Publishing Group
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Fuji Technology Press
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Korean Society of Steel Construction
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
The Korean Society for Aeronautical & Space Sciences
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Belgrade University
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
7 citations, 0.01%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
14000
16000
|
Publishing organizations
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
|
|
Southwest Jiaotong University
314 publications, 7.88%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Milan
105 publications, 2.63%
|
|
Delft University of Technology
76 publications, 1.91%
|
|
Chalmers University of Technology
73 publications, 1.83%
|
|
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
72 publications, 1.81%
|
|
University of Michigan
63 publications, 1.58%
|
|
Tongji University
60 publications, 1.51%
|
|
University of Waterloo
51 publications, 1.28%
|
|
University of Cambridge
50 publications, 1.25%
|
|
Loughborough University
50 publications, 1.25%
|
|
Central Queensland University
46 publications, 1.15%
|
|
Technical University of Berlin
43 publications, 1.08%
|
|
Tsinghua University
38 publications, 0.95%
|
|
University of Padua
37 publications, 0.93%
|
|
University of California, Berkeley
37 publications, 0.93%
|
|
University of Leeds
36 publications, 0.9%
|
|
University of Huddersfield
36 publications, 0.9%
|
|
Beijing Jiaotong University
35 publications, 0.88%
|
|
Jilin University
32 publications, 0.8%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Turin
32 publications, 0.8%
|
|
Central South University
31 publications, 0.78%
|
|
University of Tokyo
31 publications, 0.78%
|
|
University of Florence
30 publications, 0.75%
|
|
Vienna University of Technology
28 publications, 0.7%
|
|
University of Surrey
28 publications, 0.7%
|
|
Virginia Tech
26 publications, 0.65%
|
|
German Aerospace Center
26 publications, 0.65%
|
|
Cranfield University
26 publications, 0.65%
|
|
Nihon University
25 publications, 0.63%
|
|
University of Southampton
23 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
22 publications, 0.55%
|
|
University of Navarra
22 publications, 0.55%
|
|
Manchester Metropolitan University
21 publications, 0.53%
|
|
Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology
21 publications, 0.53%
|
|
Warsaw University of Technology
21 publications, 0.53%
|
|
University of California, Davis
20 publications, 0.5%
|
|
Iran University of Science and Technology
19 publications, 0.48%
|
|
Beijing Institute of Technology
18 publications, 0.45%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Valencia
18 publications, 0.45%
|
|
Eindhoven University of Technology
17 publications, 0.43%
|
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
17 publications, 0.43%
|
|
Seoul National University
17 publications, 0.43%
|
|
University of Stuttgart
16 publications, 0.4%
|
|
University of Lisbon
15 publications, 0.38%
|
|
University of Naples Federico II
15 publications, 0.38%
|
|
University of Technology Sydney
15 publications, 0.38%
|
|
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
14 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Toyota Motor Corporation
14 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Kanagawa Institute of Technology
14 publications, 0.35%
|
|
University of Ontario Institute of Technology
14 publications, 0.35%
|
|
Indian Institute of Technology Madras
13 publications, 0.33%
|
|
Technical University of Munich
13 publications, 0.33%
|
|
University of Birmingham
13 publications, 0.33%
|
|
Hunan University
13 publications, 0.33%
|
|
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
12 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Graz University of Technology
12 publications, 0.3%
|
|
Chongqing Jiaotong University
11 publications, 0.28%
|
|
University of Melbourne
11 publications, 0.28%
|
|
University of Pretoria
11 publications, 0.28%
|
|
Lanzhou Jiaotong University
11 publications, 0.28%
|
|
Technical University of Denmark
10 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of Nottingham
10 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Korea Railroad Research Institute
10 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of Minnesota
10 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of Kaiserslautern-Landau
10 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Chongqing University
9 publications, 0.23%
|
|
Shijiazhuang Tiedao University
9 publications, 0.23%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Bari
9 publications, 0.23%
|
|
University of Wollongong
9 publications, 0.23%
|
|
Clemson University
9 publications, 0.23%
|
|
Lund University
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Linköping University
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Jiangsu University
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Hefei University of Technology
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
University of Pisa
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Queen's University at Kingston
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Technical University of Braunschweig
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
University of Salford
8 publications, 0.2%
|
|
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Imperial College London
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Oxford
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
National Taiwan University
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Siena
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Georgia Institute of technology
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Hanyang University
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Illinois at Chicago
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Bristol
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Wayne State University
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Porto
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
University of Sheffield
7 publications, 0.18%
|
|
Bryansk State Technical University
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Petersburg State Transport University
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
South China University of Technology
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Dalian University of Technology
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
University of Twente
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
ETH Zurich
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Nanyang Technological University
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
University of Warwick
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Chengdu University of Technology
6 publications, 0.15%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
|
Publishing organizations in 5 years
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
|
|
Southwest Jiaotong University
187 publications, 27.26%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Milan
30 publications, 4.37%
|
|
Tongji University
28 publications, 4.08%
|
|
Central South University
24 publications, 3.5%
|
|
Chalmers University of Technology
22 publications, 3.21%
|
|
Beijing Jiaotong University
18 publications, 2.62%
|
|
University of Huddersfield
18 publications, 2.62%
|
|
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
15 publications, 2.19%
|
|
Central Queensland University
12 publications, 1.75%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Turin
11 publications, 1.6%
|
|
University of Surrey
11 publications, 1.6%
|
|
University of Lisbon
10 publications, 1.46%
|
|
University of Padua
10 publications, 1.46%
|
|
Lanzhou Jiaotong University
10 publications, 1.46%
|
|
University of Waterloo
10 publications, 1.46%
|
|
Chongqing Jiaotong University
9 publications, 1.31%
|
|
University of Florence
9 publications, 1.31%
|
|
Jilin University
8 publications, 1.17%
|
|
Tsinghua University
7 publications, 1.02%
|
|
Shijiazhuang Tiedao University
7 publications, 1.02%
|
|
Delft University of Technology
7 publications, 1.02%
|
|
Hefei University of Technology
7 publications, 1.02%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Bari
7 publications, 1.02%
|
|
Technical University of Berlin
7 publications, 1.02%
|
|
University of Cambridge
6 publications, 0.87%
|
|
University of Birmingham
6 publications, 0.87%
|
|
Virginia Tech
6 publications, 0.87%
|
|
Beijing Institute of Technology
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Chongqing University
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Jiangsu University
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
University of Southampton
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Zhejiang Normal University
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Hunan University
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
University of Michigan
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
University of Castilla-La Mancha
5 publications, 0.73%
|
|
Technical University of Munich
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Nanjing Tech University
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of Naples Federico II
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Nanyang Technological University
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Shanghai University of Engineering Science
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of Wollongong
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Swinburne University of Technology
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of the Witwatersrand
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of Pretoria
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of Bristol
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
University of Sheffield
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Warsaw University of Technology
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Polytechnic University of Valencia
4 publications, 0.58%
|
|
Indian Institute of Technology Madras
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Zhejiang University
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
South China University of Technology
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Yanshan University
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
University of Technology Sydney
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Clemson University
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
University of Porto
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Universidade Estadual de Campinas
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Cranfield University
3 publications, 0.44%
|
|
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Harbin Institute of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Northwestern Polytechnical University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Nanjing Forestry University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Technische Universität Dresden
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Eindhoven University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Taiyuan University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Technical University of Denmark
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Yangzhou University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Guangdong University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Chengdu University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Chengdu University of Information Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Xihua University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Loughborough University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Anhui Polytechnic University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Fujian University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Trento
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Johannesburg
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of California, Berkeley
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of California, Los Angeles
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of California, Merced
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Vienna University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Institute for Computer Science and Control
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Patras
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Macau
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Technical University of Darmstadt
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Innsbruck
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Waseda University
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Toyohashi University of Technology
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Navarra
2 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Nazarbayev University
1 publication, 0.15%
|
|
Russian University of Transport
1 publication, 0.15%
|
|
Petersburg State Transport University
1 publication, 0.15%
|
|
Sharif University of Technology
1 publication, 0.15%
|
|
Iran University of Science and Technology
1 publication, 0.15%
|
|
Babol Noshirvani University of Technology
1 publication, 0.15%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
|
Publishing countries
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
|
|
China
|
China, 733, 18.39%
China
733 publications, 18.39%
|
USA
|
USA, 397, 9.96%
USA
397 publications, 9.96%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 388, 9.74%
United Kingdom
388 publications, 9.74%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 271, 6.8%
Germany
271 publications, 6.8%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 268, 6.73%
Italy
268 publications, 6.73%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 189, 4.74%
Sweden
189 publications, 4.74%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 156, 3.91%
Japan
156 publications, 3.91%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 124, 3.11%
Netherlands
124 publications, 3.11%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 122, 3.06%
Australia
122 publications, 3.06%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 119, 2.99%
Canada
119 publications, 2.99%
|
France
|
France, 98, 2.46%
France
98 publications, 2.46%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 86, 2.16%
Spain
86 publications, 2.16%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 71, 1.78%
Austria
71 publications, 1.78%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 62, 1.56%
Republic of Korea
62 publications, 1.56%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 38, 0.95%
Poland
38 publications, 0.95%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 37, 0.93%
Iran
37 publications, 0.93%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 31, 0.78%
Belgium
31 publications, 0.78%
|
India
|
India, 27, 0.68%
India
27 publications, 0.68%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 26, 0.65%
Portugal
26 publications, 0.65%
|
Hungary
|
Hungary, 26, 0.65%
Hungary
26 publications, 0.65%
|
South Africa
|
South Africa, 26, 0.65%
South Africa
26 publications, 0.65%
|
Czech Republic
|
Czech Republic, 24, 0.6%
Czech Republic
24 publications, 0.6%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 18, 0.45%
Russia
18 publications, 0.45%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 18, 0.45%
Turkey
18 publications, 0.45%
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland, 14, 0.35%
Switzerland
14 publications, 0.35%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 12, 0.3%
Brazil
12 publications, 0.3%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 12, 0.3%
Denmark
12 publications, 0.3%
|
Slovakia
|
Slovakia, 11, 0.28%
Slovakia
11 publications, 0.28%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 9, 0.23%
Greece
9 publications, 0.23%
|
Croatia
|
Croatia, 9, 0.23%
Croatia
9 publications, 0.23%
|
Czechoslovakia
|
Czechoslovakia, 9, 0.23%
Czechoslovakia
9 publications, 0.23%
|
Norway
|
Norway, 8, 0.2%
Norway
8 publications, 0.2%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 8, 0.2%
Singapore
8 publications, 0.2%
|
Egypt
|
Egypt, 7, 0.18%
Egypt
7 publications, 0.18%
|
Ukraine
|
Ukraine, 6, 0.15%
Ukraine
6 publications, 0.15%
|
Iraq
|
Iraq, 5, 0.13%
Iraq
5 publications, 0.13%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 5, 0.13%
Ireland
5 publications, 0.13%
|
Colombia
|
Colombia, 5, 0.13%
Colombia
5 publications, 0.13%
|
Romania
|
Romania, 5, 0.13%
Romania
5 publications, 0.13%
|
Israel
|
Israel, 4, 0.1%
Israel
4 publications, 0.1%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 4, 0.1%
Malaysia
4 publications, 0.1%
|
Mexico
|
Mexico, 4, 0.1%
Mexico
4 publications, 0.1%
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Saudi Arabia, 4, 0.1%
Saudi Arabia
4 publications, 0.1%
|
Luxembourg
|
Luxembourg, 3, 0.08%
Luxembourg
3 publications, 0.08%
|
Finland
|
Finland, 3, 0.08%
Finland
3 publications, 0.08%
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnam, 2, 0.05%
Vietnam
2 publications, 0.05%
|
New Zealand
|
New Zealand, 2, 0.05%
New Zealand
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Serbia
|
Serbia, 2, 0.05%
Serbia
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Slovenia
|
Slovenia, 2, 0.05%
Slovenia
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Yugoslavia
|
Yugoslavia, 2, 0.05%
Yugoslavia
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Kazakhstan
|
Kazakhstan, 1, 0.03%
Kazakhstan
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Algeria
|
Algeria, 1, 0.03%
Algeria
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Bahrain
|
Bahrain, 1, 0.03%
Bahrain
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Bulgaria
|
Bulgaria, 1, 0.03%
Bulgaria
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Venezuela
|
Venezuela, 1, 0.03%
Venezuela
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Indonesia
|
Indonesia, 1, 0.03%
Indonesia
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Jordan
|
Jordan, 1, 0.03%
Jordan
1 publication, 0.03%
|
North Korea
|
North Korea, 1, 0.03%
North Korea
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Latvia
|
Latvia, 1, 0.03%
Latvia
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Lebanon
|
Lebanon, 1, 0.03%
Lebanon
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Lithuania
|
Lithuania, 1, 0.03%
Lithuania
1 publication, 0.03%
|
UAE
|
UAE, 1, 0.03%
UAE
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan, 1, 0.03%
Pakistan
1 publication, 0.03%
|
North Macedonia
|
North Macedonia, 1, 0.03%
North Macedonia
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Thailand
|
Thailand, 1, 0.03%
Thailand
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Philippines
|
Philippines, 1, 0.03%
Philippines
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Chile
|
Chile, 1, 0.03%
Chile
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Ecuador
|
Ecuador, 1, 0.03%
Ecuador
1 publication, 0.03%
|
USSR
|
USSR, 1, 0.03%
USSR
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Show all (39 more) | |
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
|
Publishing countries in 5 years
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
|
|
China
|
China, 365, 53.21%
China
365 publications, 53.21%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 78, 11.37%
Italy
78 publications, 11.37%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 67, 9.77%
United Kingdom
67 publications, 9.77%
|
USA
|
USA, 48, 7%
USA
48 publications, 7%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 44, 6.41%
Sweden
44 publications, 6.41%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 35, 5.1%
Australia
35 publications, 5.1%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 27, 3.94%
Germany
27 publications, 3.94%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 18, 2.62%
Canada
18 publications, 2.62%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 16, 2.33%
Netherlands
16 publications, 2.33%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 15, 2.19%
Spain
15 publications, 2.19%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 14, 2.04%
Portugal
14 publications, 2.04%
|
France
|
France, 13, 1.9%
France
13 publications, 1.9%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 11, 1.6%
Austria
11 publications, 1.6%
|
India
|
India, 9, 1.31%
India
9 publications, 1.31%
|
South Africa
|
South Africa, 9, 1.31%
South Africa
9 publications, 1.31%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 8, 1.17%
Republic of Korea
8 publications, 1.17%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 6, 0.87%
Belgium
6 publications, 0.87%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 6, 0.87%
Brazil
6 publications, 0.87%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 6, 0.87%
Japan
6 publications, 0.87%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 5, 0.73%
Poland
5 publications, 0.73%
|
Hungary
|
Hungary, 4, 0.58%
Hungary
4 publications, 0.58%
|
Norway
|
Norway, 4, 0.58%
Norway
4 publications, 0.58%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 4, 0.58%
Singapore
4 publications, 0.58%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 3, 0.44%
Russia
3 publications, 0.44%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 3, 0.44%
Greece
3 publications, 0.44%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 3, 0.44%
Iran
3 publications, 0.44%
|
Czech Republic
|
Czech Republic, 3, 0.44%
Czech Republic
3 publications, 0.44%
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland, 3, 0.44%
Switzerland
3 publications, 0.44%
|
Ukraine
|
Ukraine, 2, 0.29%
Ukraine
2 publications, 0.29%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 2, 0.29%
Denmark
2 publications, 0.29%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 2, 0.29%
Ireland
2 publications, 0.29%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 2, 0.29%
Turkey
2 publications, 0.29%
|
Kazakhstan
|
Kazakhstan, 1, 0.15%
Kazakhstan
1 publication, 0.15%
|
Egypt
|
Egypt, 1, 0.15%
Egypt
1 publication, 0.15%
|
Colombia
|
Colombia, 1, 0.15%
Colombia
1 publication, 0.15%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 1, 0.15%
Malaysia
1 publication, 0.15%
|
New Zealand
|
New Zealand, 1, 0.15%
New Zealand
1 publication, 0.15%
|
Croatia
|
Croatia, 1, 0.15%
Croatia
1 publication, 0.15%
|
Show all (8 more) | |
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1 profile journal article
Taciroglu Ertugrul
PhD in Engineering, Professor

University of California, Los Angeles
224 publications,
3 548 citations
h-index: 30
Research interests
Soil Structure Interaction
1 profile journal article
Gabiccini Marco
PhD in Engineering, Associate Professor

University of Pisa
80 publications,
2 060 citations
h-index: 23
Research interests
Robotics
Unmanned vehicles
Vehicle dynamics
1 profile journal article
Semiha Turkay
🤝
65 publications,
385 citations
h-index: 8