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journal names
Hybridoma
Top-3 citing journals

Hybridoma
(942 citations)

Journal of Immunological Methods
(508 citations)

Journal of Biological Chemistry
(409 citations)
Top-3 organizations

Air Force Medical University
(39 publications)

Kyushu University
(21 publications)

Rhenish Friedrich Wilhelm University of Bonn
(19 publications)
Most cited in 5 years
Found
Publications found: 92

Fuller spectrum operations: the emergence of larval warfare
Nandita B.M.
This essay sets out to tackle a theoretical challenge: to offer a conceptual re-framing that addresses how digital technical and cultural transformations have influenced the nature of modern warfare resulting in the emergence of ‘larval warfare’ (larva being Latin for ‘mask’ and/or ‘spectre’). The aim is to explore the rationale and theory of larval warfare, as well as speculate about its significance and implications for future security challenges that will necessitate not only managing risks and threats, but also require the creation of new concepts and epistemological tools. Focusing on conceptual/philosophical arguments, I speculate about the emergence of a distinct construct of warfare that conceptually depends on blurring the strict boundaries between military and civilian domains. The latent, emergent, and masked nature of this mode of warfare exceeds, and thus disrupts, traditional domains of theorization. As a construct (rather than as a ‘model’ or ‘prototype’ that can be implemented), the notion of larval warfare allows philosophical rumination about the changing nature of warfare in the context of planetary-wide technical transformations. The first section introduces the theoretical context and empirical trends that have led to the emergence of larval warfare, focusing on outlining selected but relevant interdisciplinary scholarship in international relations, war studies, surveillance/media studies, and cultural studies. The next section offers a philosophical interpretation of the notion of ‘larval warfare’ and lays out its distinctions from the existing models of modern warfare (conventional and non-conventional). The final section concludes with some thoughts on the fundamentally predatory quality of larval warfare and its amenability with the contemporary phenomenon of ‘surveillance capitalism.’

Investigating the kill cloud: information warfare, autonomous weapons & AI
Bhila I.
Abstract
The “kill chain”—involving the analysis of data by human users of military technologies, the understanding of that data, and human decisions—has fast been replaced by the “kill cloud” that necessitates, allows, and exacerbates increased thirst for domination, violence against distant populations, and a culture of experimentation with human lives. This commentary reports an interdisciplinary discussion organised by the Disruption Network Lab that brought together whistleblowers, artists, and experts investigating the impact of artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies on networked warfare. Exposing the problematics of networked warfare and the kill cloud, their colonial overtones, effects on human subjects in real life, erroneous scientific rationalities, and the (business) practices and logics that enable this algorithmic machinery of violence. The conference took place from the 29th of November to the 1st of December 2024 at the Kunstquartier Bethanien in Berlin, Germany.

Influencing machines: Trevor Paglen and Anthony Downey
Paglen T., Downey A.
AbstractHow do you train an artificial intelligence (AI), or automated image processing model, to classify and recognize images? This question is central to Trevor Paglen’s Adversarially Evolved Hallucination series (2017–ongoing), a project that employs a generative adversarial network (GAN) to classify, identify and crucially, produce unique images. Paglen’s series demonstrates how images produced by AI image processing platforms—in this instance, a GAN—are, despite claims, never predictable or, indeed, accurate in their classifications. A significant indicator of this unreliability is evident in the potential for GANs, alongside other generative AI (GenAI) models, to hallucinate and erroneously classify images. Notwithstanding this systemic failing, automated image processing platforms remain central to classification tasks, including those associated with facial recognition and surveillance. They remain, for that reason, central to defining, if not pre-defining, how we perceive and look at the world through automated models of machine vision. Encouraged to see like machines, or at least take their classifications seriously and act upon them accordingly, we now inhabit a realm of perception defined by “machine realism”, if not algorithmic delusion. Enquiring into how we can better understand the degree to which AI encodes our perception of the world, it is this regimen of “machine realism” that Paglen and Downey explore throughout the following conversation: If AI models of image perception replace ocular-centric ways of seeing, they ask, do these apparatuses have the capacity to not only (pre)define but, in time, further estrange and alienate us from the world?

The fallen on Facebook: online war commemoration in the UK
van Leeuwen S.
This article investigates how fallen British soldiers of Operation TELIC (Iraq) and Operation Herrick (Afghanistan) are commemorated on the Facebook page British Troops Remembered. Based on an online ethnography and fifteen semi-structured interviews with users of this page, this article aims to better understand how online commemoration is performed, experienced and shaped in everyday life. It argues that people participate in the reproduction of militarism when they promote military values and frame military lives as grievable and worthy through commemorative practices. Paradoxically, although digital commemorative spaces offer new opportunities for people to counter official narratives of warfare and democratize national memory, it is precisely this possibility that keeps people from sharing alternative interpretations of military losses online. By analysing how the logics of militarism are reproduced in everyday encounters online, this article aims to contribute to discussions within critical military studies and memory studies about the relationship between online commemoration and militarism.

Leaked email data: a new source for the study of authoritarian regimes
Hosaka S.
This article examines the significance and practical challenges of using leaked email data for academic research into the inner mechanisms of non-democratic regimes, with a focus on Russia’s hybrid warfare against Ukraine. While investigative journalism and open-source intelligence have immensely benefited from leaked email data, academia has largely distanced itself from this novel type of reference and related empirical findings. Initial scholarly endeavors utilizing leaked emails highlight two key issues: 1) the authenticity of leaked data and the specifics of its interpretation and verification; and 2) research ethics concerning the privacy of leaked email account holders. I argue that traceability and ethical dilemmas should be addressed in tandem, considering the wider public good. The findings of this article may also apply to the study of other authoritarian regimes, such as China and Iran.

Tactics and affordances in the mediatization of war: pro-Ukrainian cyber resistance on Telegram
Canevez R.N., Maikovska K., Zwarun L.
When Russia escalated its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, pro-Ukrainian resisters around the world took to cyber and digital spaces to support Ukraine’s cause. Social media platform Telegram played a vital role in coordinating and mobilizing action transnationally, foregrounding the impact of platform design and use in the trajectory of war’s mediatization. Our study contributes to empirical research and theory around cyber resistance tactics and platform affordances. We use qualitative thematic analysis to examine Telegram posts from the first two months of the full-scale invasion on select pro-Ukrainian resistance channels, identifying a range of tactics constructed within Telegram. This includes a phenomenon of “kitting” whereby capable members and moderators provide tools and templates, along with guidance, to participants to lower the access barrier to cyber resistance. We discuss Telegram’s affordances in relation to these tactics and, noting how Telegram is used to coordinate action on other social media, we propose a model of user-affordances interaction in a multiplatform media environment. Lastly, we provide suggestions for designers and policymakers regarding platform designs in broadly coordinated cyber resistance.

Putting algorithmic bias on top of the agenda in the discussions on autonomous weapons systems
Bhila I.
AbstractBiases in artificial intelligence have been flagged in academic and policy literature for years. Autonomous weapons systems—defined as weapons that use sensors and algorithms to select, track, target, and engage targets without human intervention—have the potential to mirror systems of societal inequality which reproduce algorithmic bias. This article argues that the problem of engrained algorithmic bias poses a greater challenge to autonomous weapons systems developers than most other risks discussed in the Group of Governmental Experts on Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (GGE on LAWS), which should be reflected in the outcome documents of these discussions. This is mainly because it takes longer to rectify a discriminatory algorithm than it does to issue an apology for a mistake that occurs occasionally. Highly militarised states have controlled both the discussions and their outcomes, which have focused on issues that are pertinent to them while ignoring what is existential for the rest of the world. Various calls from civil society, researchers, and smaller states for a legally binding instrument to regulate the development and use of autonomous weapons systems have always included the call for recognising algorithmic bias in autonomous weapons, which has not been reflected in discussion outcomes. This paper argues that any ethical framework developed for the regulation of autonomous weapons systems should, in detail, ensure that the development and use of autonomous weapons systems do not prejudice against vulnerable sections of (global) society.

Correction: Unfuturing peace: augmented reality image design for Guerrilla peacebuilding
Digital War
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
Glybchenko Y.


Analyzing influence operations on Facebook: an exploratory study
Albert C.D., Hunter L.Y., Mullaney S., Mays M.
Recently, there have been groundbreaking studies that seek to create unique cybersecurity datasets used to empirically test theories related to strategic cybersecurity. To date, however, this research has neglected cyber-enabled information operations (CEIO). With the remarkable amount of information operations being reported on social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, there is a substantial gap in the literature regarding empirical studies on CEIO using cross-national datasets. This exploratory, descriptive study seeks to remedy this dilemma. To do so, this paper investigates the question, “What are the political and economic characteristics of states that are most likely to be targeted by CEIO over social media on Facebook?” To investigate, this exploratory, descriptive study utilizes a unique Information Operations Threat Report Dataset (2020) based on Facebook’s release of 2020 influence operations information that captures CEIO on its platform from 2017 to 2020. A descriptive data analysis reveals that mixed regimes (i.e., states that are partially authoritarian and democratic) and slightly wealthier states are more likely to be targeted in CEIO on Facebook. These exploratory findings provide useful insights into what types of states may be more susceptible to CEIO attacks on Facebook.

Light-speed, contemporary war, and Australia’s national defence strategic review
Brimblecombe-Fox K.
AbstractIn our hyperconnected contemporary world, military and civilian digital and cyber technologies rely upon uncontested and uncongested access to frequencies in the electromagnetic spectrum (EMS). This reliance enables light-speed signalic connectivity, interconnectivity, operability, and interoperability of the systems and devices that perpetuate twenty-first century modes of information, remote, hybrid, and digital warfare. Informed by cultural theorist Paul Virilio’s commentaries on speed, light-speed, and war, this article examines speed as an inflection that insidiously underpins the Australian Government’s 2023 National Defence: Defence Strategy Review (DSR) (public version). This is not an exhaustive study of light-speed or the DSR. Rather, this article aims to show how speed and light-speed, used as investigatory lenses, can provide critical insights into relationships between contemporary technology, and war. To this end, the article refers to US and UK defence and government electromagnetic spectrum policy statements, interpolating them into motivations for AUKUS, and the DSR’s positioning.

Unfuturing peace: augmented reality image design for Guerilla peacebuilding
Glybchenko Y.
AbstractThis project explores the potential of image-making in augmented reality (AR) technologies as means of designing sustaining quality peace futures—unfuturing peace, focusing on Ukraine’s heroic defense against Russia’s 2022–2024 full-scale war of aggression as a case study. Employing the methodology of compositional interpretation and the conceptual tool “futures images,” the project theoretically and practically differentiates between defuturing and unfuturing as peace design processes in developing an essay of originally designed marker-based Augmented Reality Posters in Support of Ukraine as demos of sustaining quality peace arrangements. The posters reference the topics of (physical) integrity of Ukrainian symbols, global food security and the security of the LGBTQI+ community in Ukraine. The technological artistic process/outcomes of this AR image-making experiment and their relation to power layouts in peacebuilding form the bases for theorizing how AR-supported futures design in war-affected communities—unfuturing peace—could facilitate “guerrilla peacebuilding.” In outlining theoretical and practical premises of guerrilla peacebuilding, the project intersects Augmented Reality Posters in Support of Ukraine with explorations of guerrilla warfare and counterinsurgency efforts leading to the 2016 Havana Peace Agreements in Colombia as well as mobile technologies/power in guerrilla approaches to democratic development.

Testimonies of aerial bombardment and communities of self-expression
Mir Z., Rabet M., Ahmed S.
Zeinab Mir, Majid Rabet and Safdar Ahmed spoke at the Sydney hearing of the Airspace Tribunal at The Ethics Centre on 14 October 2019. The hearing considered the case for and against a proposed new human right to protect the freedom to live without physical or psychological threat from above. This text expands on the evidence which they presented to the hearing and considers the experience of aerial bombardment, the impacts of trauma and anxiety on future generations and the role of art and activism in thinking outside the medical model, raising questions of accountability and agency, and developing communities of self-expression. The Counsel to the Tribunal was Professor Andrew Byrnes.

Adel Al Manthari and Baraa Shiban: Drone Strikes and the Lack of Accountability
Digital War
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
Shiban B.


Threat from the air: a neuropsychologist’s perspective on psychological and physiological harm
Digital War
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
Loveday C.


Human Rights: a Project of Making the Invisible Visible
Digital War
,
2024
,
citations by CoLab: 0
Gearty C.

Top-100
Citing journals
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Hybridoma
942 citations, 5.34%
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Journal of Immunological Methods
508 citations, 2.88%
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Journal of Biological Chemistry
409 citations, 2.32%
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Journal of Immunology
282 citations, 1.6%
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European Journal of Immunology
264 citations, 1.5%
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International Journal of Cancer
231 citations, 1.31%
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Monoclonal Antibodies in Immunodiagnosis and Immunotherapy
223 citations, 1.26%
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PLoS ONE
205 citations, 1.16%
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Molecular Immunology
191 citations, 1.08%
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Blood
130 citations, 0.74%
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Cellular Immunology
127 citations, 0.72%
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Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
123 citations, 0.7%
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Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
108 citations, 0.61%
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99 citations, 0.56%
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82 citations, 0.46%
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Scandinavian Journal of Immunology
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Journal of Virology
77 citations, 0.44%
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76 citations, 0.43%
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Immunology Letters
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70 citations, 0.4%
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66 citations, 0.37%
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65 citations, 0.37%
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54 citations, 0.31%
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Immunobiology
53 citations, 0.3%
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50 citations, 0.28%
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Experimental Cell Research
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48 citations, 0.27%
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44 citations, 0.25%
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Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
43 citations, 0.24%
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Journal of Biotechnology
42 citations, 0.24%
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Oncotarget
41 citations, 0.23%
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40 citations, 0.23%
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Toxins
38 citations, 0.22%
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Citing publishers
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Elsevier
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2550 citations, 14.44%
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Springer Nature
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47 citations, 0.27%
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45 citations, 0.25%
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42 citations, 0.24%
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37 citations, 0.21%
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34 citations, 0.19%
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30 citations, 0.17%
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29 citations, 0.16%
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24 citations, 0.14%
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24 citations, 0.14%
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9 citations, 0.05%
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9 citations, 0.05%
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7 citations, 0.04%
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6 citations, 0.03%
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5 citations, 0.03%
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5 citations, 0.03%
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4 citations, 0.02%
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Czech Academy of Agricultural Sciences
4 citations, 0.02%
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The Royal Society
4 citations, 0.02%
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American Society of Nephrology
4 citations, 0.02%
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4 citations, 0.02%
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4 citations, 0.02%
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4 citations, 0.02%
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Scientific Societies
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F1000 Research
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AIP Publishing
3 citations, 0.02%
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Higher Education Press
3 citations, 0.02%
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3 citations, 0.02%
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Air Force Medical University
39 publications, 1.63%
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Kyushu University
21 publications, 0.88%
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Rhenish Friedrich Wilhelm University of Bonn
19 publications, 0.79%
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Soochow University (Suzhou)
18 publications, 0.75%
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Osaka Metropolitan University
18 publications, 0.75%
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Harvard University
17 publications, 0.71%
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Osaka University
17 publications, 0.71%
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Seoul National University
13 publications, 0.54%
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Tehran University of Medical Sciences
12 publications, 0.5%
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University of Tehran
12 publications, 0.5%
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University College London
12 publications, 0.5%
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French Institute of Health and Medical Research
12 publications, 0.5%
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Northeast Agricultural University
11 publications, 0.46%
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University of Alberta
11 publications, 0.46%
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Tarbiat Modares University
10 publications, 0.42%
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Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
9 publications, 0.38%
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University of Michigan
9 publications, 0.38%
|
|
Wistar Institute
9 publications, 0.38%
|
|
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
9 publications, 0.38%
|
|
University of California, Los Angeles
8 publications, 0.33%
|
|
University of Pennsylvania
8 publications, 0.33%
|
|
Peking University
7 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Konkuk University
7 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
7 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Saarland University
7 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Fukuoka University
7 publications, 0.29%
|
|
University of Alabama at Birmingham
7 publications, 0.29%
|
|
Shanghai Jiao Tong University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Chongqing Medical University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of Southern California
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Johns Hopkins University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Istituto Nazionale Tumori IRCCS "Fondazione G. Pascale"
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Brigham and Women's Hospital
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of California, Davis
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Institut Pasteur
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Ulm University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Hallym University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Thomas Jefferson University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Chiba University
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
Cancer Research UK Cambridge Center
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
University of Iowa
6 publications, 0.25%
|
|
TÜBİTAK Marmara Research Center
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
National Institute of Immunology
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Karolinska University Hospital
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Humboldt University of Berlin
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
University of Milan
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Southern Medical University
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Dalhousie University
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Japan Science and Technology Agency
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Hokkaido University
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
Mayo Clinic
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
National Institute of Infectious Diseases
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
University of Tartu
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
New York Medical College
5 publications, 0.21%
|
|
![]() Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Razi University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Zhejiang University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Huazhong University of Science and Technology
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Sichuan University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Uppsala University Hospital
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Huazhong Agricultural University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Imperial College London
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Boston University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Chiang Mai University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Northwestern University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Duke University Hospital
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Duke University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
University of Washington
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
University of California, San Diego
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
University of California Davis Medical Center
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Shandong University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Vanderbilt University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Nihon University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Temple University
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
University of Manitoba
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
University of Nebraska Medical Center
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
National Cancer Institute
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
University of Vermont
4 publications, 0.17%
|
|
Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Academic Center for Education Culture and Research
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Tata Memorial Centre
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Safdarjung Hospital
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Northwestern Polytechnical University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
University of Malaya
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Uppsala University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Karolinska Institute
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Wuhan University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
China Three Gorges University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Cornell University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
University of Tsukuba
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
University of Rome Tor Vergata
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Pennsylvania State University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Iowa State University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Tokyo Medical and Dental University
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
University of Pretoria
3 publications, 0.13%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
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Publishing countries
50
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350
400
450
|
|
USA
|
USA, 432, 18.02%
USA
432 publications, 18.02%
|
China
|
China, 199, 8.3%
China
199 publications, 8.3%
|
Japan
|
Japan, 148, 6.17%
Japan
148 publications, 6.17%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 107, 4.46%
Germany
107 publications, 4.46%
|
France
|
France, 63, 2.63%
France
63 publications, 2.63%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 60, 2.5%
United Kingdom
60 publications, 2.5%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 52, 2.17%
Canada
52 publications, 2.17%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 45, 1.88%
Republic of Korea
45 publications, 1.88%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 44, 1.83%
Italy
44 publications, 1.83%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 36, 1.5%
Iran
36 publications, 1.5%
|
India
|
India, 34, 1.42%
India
34 publications, 1.42%
|
Cuba
|
Cuba, 26, 1.08%
Cuba
26 publications, 1.08%
|
Sweden
|
Sweden, 22, 0.92%
Sweden
22 publications, 0.92%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 21, 0.88%
Netherlands
21 publications, 0.88%
|
Australia
|
Australia, 17, 0.71%
Australia
17 publications, 0.71%
|
Russia
|
Russia, 16, 0.67%
Russia
16 publications, 0.67%
|
Brazil
|
Brazil, 15, 0.63%
Brazil
15 publications, 0.63%
|
Ukraine
|
Ukraine, 13, 0.54%
Ukraine
13 publications, 0.54%
|
Spain
|
Spain, 11, 0.46%
Spain
11 publications, 0.46%
|
Turkey
|
Turkey, 11, 0.46%
Turkey
11 publications, 0.46%
|
Estonia
|
Estonia, 8, 0.33%
Estonia
8 publications, 0.33%
|
Israel
|
Israel, 8, 0.33%
Israel
8 publications, 0.33%
|
Mexico
|
Mexico, 8, 0.33%
Mexico
8 publications, 0.33%
|
Denmark
|
Denmark, 7, 0.29%
Denmark
7 publications, 0.29%
|
Malaysia
|
Malaysia, 7, 0.29%
Malaysia
7 publications, 0.29%
|
Poland
|
Poland, 7, 0.29%
Poland
7 publications, 0.29%
|
Thailand
|
Thailand, 7, 0.29%
Thailand
7 publications, 0.29%
|
Switzerland
|
Switzerland, 7, 0.29%
Switzerland
7 publications, 0.29%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 6, 0.25%
Greece
6 publications, 0.25%
|
Czech Republic
|
Czech Republic, 6, 0.25%
Czech Republic
6 publications, 0.25%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 5, 0.21%
Belgium
5 publications, 0.21%
|
Argentina
|
Argentina, 4, 0.17%
Argentina
4 publications, 0.17%
|
Bulgaria
|
Bulgaria, 4, 0.17%
Bulgaria
4 publications, 0.17%
|
New Zealand
|
New Zealand, 4, 0.17%
New Zealand
4 publications, 0.17%
|
Norway
|
Norway, 4, 0.17%
Norway
4 publications, 0.17%
|
Slovakia
|
Slovakia, 4, 0.17%
Slovakia
4 publications, 0.17%
|
South Africa
|
South Africa, 4, 0.17%
South Africa
4 publications, 0.17%
|
Austria
|
Austria, 3, 0.13%
Austria
3 publications, 0.13%
|
Ghana
|
Ghana, 3, 0.13%
Ghana
3 publications, 0.13%
|
Ireland
|
Ireland, 3, 0.13%
Ireland
3 publications, 0.13%
|
Finland
|
Finland, 3, 0.13%
Finland
3 publications, 0.13%
|
Chile
|
Chile, 3, 0.13%
Chile
3 publications, 0.13%
|
Portugal
|
Portugal, 2, 0.08%
Portugal
2 publications, 0.08%
|
Georgia
|
Georgia, 2, 0.08%
Georgia
2 publications, 0.08%
|
Kenya
|
Kenya, 2, 0.08%
Kenya
2 publications, 0.08%
|
Singapore
|
Singapore, 2, 0.08%
Singapore
2 publications, 0.08%
|
Uruguay
|
Uruguay, 2, 0.08%
Uruguay
2 publications, 0.08%
|
USSR
|
USSR, 2, 0.08%
USSR
2 publications, 0.08%
|
Czechoslovakia
|
Czechoslovakia, 2, 0.08%
Czechoslovakia
2 publications, 0.08%
|
Belarus
|
Belarus, 1, 0.04%
Belarus
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Hungary
|
Hungary, 1, 0.04%
Hungary
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Venezuela
|
Venezuela, 1, 0.04%
Venezuela
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Jordan
|
Jordan, 1, 0.04%
Jordan
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Cameroon
|
Cameroon, 1, 0.04%
Cameroon
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Latvia
|
Latvia, 1, 0.04%
Latvia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Lithuania
|
Lithuania, 1, 0.04%
Lithuania
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Pakistan
|
Pakistan, 1, 0.04%
Pakistan
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Romania
|
Romania, 1, 0.04%
Romania
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Saudi Arabia, 1, 0.04%
Saudi Arabia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Serbia
|
Serbia, 1, 0.04%
Serbia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Tunisia
|
Tunisia, 1, 0.04%
Tunisia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Yugoslavia
|
Yugoslavia, 1, 0.04%
Yugoslavia
1 publication, 0.04%
|
Show all (32 more) | |
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
|
5 profile journal articles
Bovin Nicolai
DSc in Chemistry, Professor

Shemyakin-Ovchinnikov Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Sciences
479 publications,
13 861 citations
h-index: 56
1 profile journal article
Osipov Sergey
DSc in Chemistry

A.N.Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds of the Russian Academy of Sciences
135 publications,
2 524 citations
h-index: 29
1 profile journal article
Chumakov Peter
47 publications,
778 citations
h-index: 16