Toyama Prefectural University

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Toyama Prefectural University
Short name
TPU
Country, city
Japan, Imizu
Publications
2 783
Citations
43 397
h-index
78
Top-3 organizations
University of Toyama
University of Toyama (219 publications)
Kyoto University
Kyoto University (185 publications)
University of Tokyo
University of Tokyo (162 publications)
Top-3 foreign organizations
Mahidol University
Mahidol University (25 publications)
Bielefeld University
Bielefeld University (18 publications)

Most cited in 5 years

Bivins A., North D., Ahmad A., Ahmed W., Alm E., Been F., Bhattacharya P., Bijlsma L., Boehm A.B., Brown J., Buttiglieri G., Calabro V., Carducci A., Castiglioni S., Cetecioglu Gurol Z., et. al.
2020-06-12 citations by CoLab: 361 Abstract  
Author(s): Bivins, Aaron; North, Devin; Ahmad, Arslan; Ahmed, Warish; Alm, Eric; Been, Frederic; Bhattacharya, Prosun; Bijlsma, Lubertus; Boehm, Alexandria B; Brown, Joe; Buttiglieri, Gianluigi; Calabro, Vincenza; Carducci, Annalaura; Castiglioni, Sara; Cetecioglu Gurol, Zeynep; Chakraborty, Sudip; Costa, Federico; Curcio, Stefano; de Los Reyes, Francis L; Delgado Vela, Jeseth; Farkas, Kata; Fernandez-Casi, Xavier; Gerba, Charles; Gerrity, Daniel; Girones, Rosina; Gonzalez, Raul; Haramoto, Eiji; Harris, Angela; Holden, Patricia A; Islam, Md Tahmidul; Jones, Davey L; Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara; Kitajima, Masaaki; Kotlarz, Nadine; Kumar, Manish; Kuroda, Keisuke; La Rosa, Giuseppina; Malpei, Francesca; Mautus, Mariana; McLellan, Sandra L; Medema, Gertjan; Meschke, John Scott; Mueller, Jochen; Newton, Ryan J; Nilsson, David; Noble, Rachel T; van Nuijs, Alexander; Peccia, Jordan; Perkins, T Alex; Pickering, Amy J; Rose, Joan; Sanchez, Gloria; Smith, Adam; Stadler, Lauren; Stauber, Christine; Thomas, Kevin; van der Voorn, Tom; Wigginton, Krista; Zhu, Kevin; Bibby, Kyle
Hata A., Hara-Yamamura H., Meuchi Y., Imai S., Honda R.
2021-03-01 citations by CoLab: 181 Abstract  
The presence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in wastewater samples has been documented in several countries. Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) is potentially effective for early warning of a COVID-19 outbreak. In this study, presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in wastewater samples was investigated and was compared with the number of the confirmed COVID-19 cases in the study area during COVID-19 outbreak in Japan. In total, 45 influent wastewater samples were collected from five wastewater treatment plants in Ishikawa and Toyama prefectures in Japan. During the study period, the numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in these prefectures increased from 0.3 and 0 to >20 per 100,000 people. SARS-CoV-2 ribonucleic acid (RNA) in the samples was detected using several PCR-based assays. Of the 45 samples, 21 were positive for SARS-CoV-2 according to at least one of the three quantitative RT-PCR assays. The detection frequency increased when the number of total confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases in 100,000 people exceeded 10 in each prefecture; however, SARS-CoV-2 could also be detected at a low frequency even when the number was below 1.0. SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater could be detected in the early stage of the epidemic, even if the number of confirmed cases potentially underestimates the actual numbers of cases. This suggests that WBE approach can potentially act as an early warning of COVID-19 outbreaks in Japan.
Kuroda K., Li C., Dhangar K., Kumar M.
2021-07-01 citations by CoLab: 165 Abstract  
Antiviral drugs have been used to treat the ever-growing number of coronavirus disease, 2019 (COVID-19) patients. Consequently, unprecedented amounts of such drug residues discharging into ambient waters raise concerns on the potential ecotoxicological effects to aquatic lives, as well as development of antiviral drug-resistance in wildlife. Here, we estimated the occurrence, fate and ecotoxicological risk of 11 therapeutic agents suggested as drugs for COVID-19 treatment and their 13 metabolites in wastewater and environmental waters, based on drug consumption, physical-chemical property, and ecotoxicological and pharmacological data for the drugs, with the aid of quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) modelling. Our results suggest that the removal efficiencies at conventional wastewater treatment plants will remain low (1) by a use of favipiravir, lopinavir, umifenovir and ritonavir, and medium (risk quotient >0.1) by a use of chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, remdesivir, and ribavirin, while the risk will remain low (risk quotient
Nakamura A., Kurihara S., Takahashi D., Ohashi W., Nakamura Y., Kimura S., Onuki M., Kume A., Sasazawa Y., Furusawa Y., Obata Y., Fukuda S., Saiki S., Matsumoto M., Hase K.
Nature Communications scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2021-04-08 citations by CoLab: 159 PDF Abstract  
Intestinal microbiota-derived metabolites have biological importance for the host. Polyamines, such as putrescine and spermidine, are produced by the intestinal microbiota and regulate multiple biological processes. Increased colonic luminal polyamines promote longevity in mice. However, no direct evidence has shown that microbial polyamines are incorporated into host cells to regulate cellular responses. Here, we show that microbial polyamines reinforce colonic epithelial proliferation and regulate macrophage differentiation. Colonisation by wild-type, but not polyamine biosynthesis-deficient, Escherichia coli in germ-free mice raises intracellular polyamine levels in colonocytes, accelerating epithelial renewal. Commensal bacterium-derived putrescine increases the abundance of anti-inflammatory macrophages in the colon. The bacterial polyamines ameliorate symptoms of dextran sulfate sodium-induced colitis in mice. These effects mainly result from enhanced hypusination of eukaryotic initiation translation factor. We conclude that bacterial putrescine functions as a substrate for symbiotic metabolism and is further absorbed and metabolised by the host, thus helping maintain mucosal homoeostasis in the intestine. Polyamines produced by intestinal bacteria are thought to have beneficial effects on the host. Here the authors show that these polyamines increase regulatory macrophage abundance and are taken up by colonic epithelial cells to enhance colonic barrier function and immunity in mice.
Tsujiguchi T., Kawabe Y., Jeong S., Ohto T., Kukunuri S., Kuramochi H., Takahashi Y., Nishiuchi T., Masuda H., Wakisaka M., Hu K., Elumalai G., Fujita J., Ito Y.
ACS Catalysis scimago Q1 wos Q1
2021-03-02 citations by CoLab: 126 Abstract  
Electrochemical CO2 reduction is a key technology to recycle CO2 as a renewable resource, but adsorbing CO2 on the catalyst surface is challenging. We explored the effects of reduced graphene oxide...
Hu K., Ohto T., Nagata Y., Wakisaka M., Aoki Y., Fujita J., Ito Y.
Nature Communications scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2021-01-08 citations by CoLab: 103 PDF Abstract  
Graphene-covering is a promising approach for achieving an acid-stable, non-noble-metal-catalysed hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Optimization of the number of graphene-covering layers and the density of defects generated by chemical doping is crucial for achieving a balance between corrosion resistance and catalytic activity. Here, we investigate the influence of charge transfer and proton penetration through the graphene layers on the HER mechanisms of the non-noble metals Ni and Cu in an acidic electrolyte. We find that increasing the number of graphene-covering layers significantly alters the HER performances of Ni and Cu. The proton penetration explored through electrochemical experiments and simulations reveals that the HER activity of the graphene-covered catalysts is governed by the degree of proton penetration, as determined by the number of graphene-covering layers. Graphene-covering technology provides a promising approach for achieving a non-noble-metal-catalyst with corrosion protection and catalytic activity under acidic media. Here, the authors unveil that the electrochemical hydrogen evolution mechanism is governed by the proton penetration phenomenon.
Kumar M., Kuroda K., Dhangar K., Mazumder P., Sonne C., Rinklebe J., Kitajima M.
2020-07-01 citations by CoLab: 79
Murakami M., Hata A., Honda R., Watanabe T.
2020-04-23 citations by CoLab: 75
Kumar M., Mazumder P., Mohapatra S., Kumar Thakur A., Dhangar K., Taki K., Mukherjee S., Kumar Patel A., Bhattacharya P., Mohapatra P., Rinklebe J., Kitajima M., Hai F.I., Khursheed A., Furumai H., et. al.
Journal of Hazardous Materials scimago Q1 wos Q1
2021-03-01 citations by CoLab: 73 Abstract  
In this review, we present the environmental perspectives of the viruses and antiviral drugs related to SARS-CoV-2. The present review paper discusses occurrence, fate, transport, susceptibility, and inactivation mechanisms of viruses in the environment as well as environmental occurrence and fate of antiviral drugs, and prospects (prevalence and occurrence) of antiviral drug resistance (both antiviral drug resistant viruses and antiviral resistance in the human). During winter, the number of viral disease cases and environmental occurrence of antiviral drug surge due to various biotic and abiotic factors such as transmission pathways, human behaviour, susceptibility, and immunity as well as cold climatic conditions. Adsorption and persistence critically determine the fate and transport of viruses in the environment. Inactivation and disinfection of virus include UV, alcohol, and other chemical-base methods but the susceptibility of virus against these methods varies. Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are major reserviors of antiviral drugs and their metabolites and transformation products. Ecotoxicity of antiviral drug residues against aquatic organisms have been reported, however more threatening is the development of antiviral resistance, both in humans and in wild animal reservoirs. In particular, emergence of antiviral drug-resistant viruses via exposure of wild animals to high loads of antiviral residues during the current pandemic needs further evaluation.
Morita Y., Nakanishi K., Iwata T., Ohwada K., Nishioka Y., Kousa T., Nurmamat M., Yamagami K., Kimura A., Yamada T., Tanida H., Kuroda K.
Physical Review B scimago Q1 wos Q2
2025-02-26 citations by CoLab: 0
Osaka Y., Okamoto R., Sumi T., Koga K., Imamura H., Shirai T., Isogai Y.
Journal of Chemical Physics scimago Q1 wos Q1
2025-02-04 citations by CoLab: 0 Abstract  
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is a widely used precipitant to concentrate proteins. The effect of PEG is generally understood to be an entropic attraction between proteins due to the depletion effect of PEG around proteins. However, measurements by Bloustine et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 087803 (2006)] of the liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) temperature have shown that a lysozyme solution is stabilized and destabilized by the addition of low and high molecular-weight PEG, respectively. They also presented a theoretical model of the LLPS temperature as a virial expansion of the free energy and concluded that, in addition to the depletion effect, the attractive interaction between protein and PEG is necessary to explain the experiments. In the present study, theoretical calculations based on liquid-state density functional theory utilizing coarse-grained models are conducted to demonstrate that the protein–PEG effective attraction is responsible for the suppression and promotion of LLPS upon the addition of low- and high-weight PEG, respectively. In contrast, if the interactions between the protein and the PEG are solely due to the excluded volume effect, PEG of any molecular weight destabilizes the solution. These results suggest the necessity to reconsider the conventional understanding of the effects of polymer addition, which have been historically attributed to solely the depletion force.
Fujihara Y., Shimada T., Kong X., Tanaka A., Nishikawa H., Tomiyama H.
Sensors scimago Q1 wos Q2 Open Access
2025-01-30 citations by CoLab: 0 PDF Abstract  
In table tennis, there are various movements involved in hitting a ball, which are called strokes, and these are an important factor in determining the contents of a game. Therefore, research has been conducted to classify these types of strokes using video gameplay data or inertial sensor information. However, the classification of strokes from actual videos of table tennis is more difficult than general action recognition tasks because many strokes display strong similarity. Therefore, this study proposes a multi-label stroke classification method, assigning multiple classes per stroke. Specifically, multi-labeling is performed by assigning two types of labels—namely the player’s posture and the rotation and velocity of the ball—to one stroke. By changing the head of the action recognition model to adopt multiple outputs for stroke classification, the difficulty in each classification task is reduced and the accuracy is improved. As a result, when performing multi-labeling classification with a conventional action recognition model, the accuracy of the validation data was improved by up to 8.6%, and the accuracy of the test data was improved by up to 18.1%. In addition, when two types of input—namely video and 3D joint coordinates—were used, the accuracy of the validation and test data was higher by 17.1 and 5.4% for 3D joint coordinates, respectively, confirming that 3D joint coordinates are effective.
Maki J., Oshimura A., Shiotani Y., Yamanaka M., Okuda S., Yanagita R.C., Kitani S., Igarashi Y., Saito Y., Sakakibara Y., Tsukano C., Irie K.
2025-01-25 citations by CoLab: 0 Abstract  
Abstract Protein kinase C (PKC) is a family of serine/threonine kinases, and PKC ligands have the potential to be therapeutic seeds for cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and human immunodeficiency virus infection. However, in addition to desired therapeutic effects, most PKC ligands also exhibit undesirable pro-inflammatory effects. The discovery of new scaffolds for PKC ligands is important for developing less inflammatory PKC ligands, such as bryostatins. We previously reported that machine learning combined with our knowledge of the pharmacophore yielded 15 PKC ligand candidates, but we did not evaluate their PKC binding affinities fully. In this paper, PKC binding affinities of four candidates were examined to assess their potential as PKC ligands and to validate machine learning-assisted screening. Although compound 3′ did not bind to PKC C1 domains, 1a, 2′, and 4a exhibited moderate PKC binding affinities, suggesting that machine learning-assisted screening is advantageous in identifying new PKC ligand scaffolds.
Oshima M., Nakayama K., Sakamura Y.
Shock Waves scimago Q2 wos Q3
2025-01-24 citations by CoLab: 0 Abstract  
This note presents a promising shock tube system to study the motion of a solid body induced by a propagating shock wave. The system consists of a horizontally-placed shock tube with a spring-loaded knife-edge to rupture the diaphragm separating the driver and driven sections. It also includes a solid-body injecting device installed on the floor of the test section. The injection timing of the solid body and the diaphragm rupture are synchronized using a digital delay circuit. Key features include suspending a solid body in midair without supports and adjusting its posture, allowing precise control of initial conditions and enabling more detailed shock wave interaction studies. A series of experiments with a rectangular solid body in three different initial postures successfully demonstrated the system’s capabilities.
Miura S., Yamagishi R., Ando M., Hachikubo Y., Ibrahim N.A., Fadilah N.I., Maarof M., Oshima M., Goo S.L., Hayashi H., Morita M., Fauzi M.B., Takei S.
Gels scimago Q1 wos Q1 Open Access
2025-01-23 citations by CoLab: 1 PDF Abstract  
Transdermal drug delivery minimizes pain and provides a controlled, stable release of drugs, but its effectiveness is limited by the skin’s natural barriers. Microneedles overcome this problem, enabling minimally invasive drug delivery. Microneedle patches (MNPs) with 80 µm-tall needles composed of hyaluronic acid (HA) were developed and evaluated for their formability, structural integrity, dissolution rate, skin penetration ability, and drug transmission capacity. The influence of the molecular weight of HA on these properties was also investigated. MNPs made from low-molecular-weight HA (30 kDa–50 kDa) demonstrated 12.5 times superior drug permeability in ex vivo human skin compared to needleless patches (NLPs). Furthermore, in the same test, low-molecular-weight HA MNPs had 1.7 times higher drug permeability than high-molecular-weight HA MNPs, suggesting superior transdermal administration. The molecular weight of HA significantly influenced its solubility and permeability, highlighting the potential effectiveness of MNPs as drug delivery systems. Puncture tests demonstrated a penetration depth of 50–60 µm, indicating minimal nerve irritation in the dermis and effective drug delivery to the superficial dermal layer. These results present a manufacturing technique for MNPs incorporating model drug compounds and highlight their potential as a novel and minimally invasive drug delivery method for the biomedical applications of soft gels.
Wang B., Matsuzaki S., Ishida H.
Journal of High Energy Physics scimago Q2 wos Q1 Open Access
2025-01-15 citations by CoLab: 0 PDF Abstract  
Abstract We discuss a QCD-scale composite axion model arising from dark QCD coupled to QCD. The presently proposed scenario not only solves the strong CP problem, but also is compatible with the preheating setup for the QCD baryogenesis. The composite axion is phenomenologically required to mimic the QCD pion, but can generically be flavorful, which could be testable via the induced flavor changing processes at experiments. Another axionlike particle (ALP) is predicted to achieve the axion relaxation mechanism, which can phenomenologically act as the conventional QCD axion. This ALP can be ultralight, having the mass less than 1 eV, to be a dark matter candidate. The QCD × dark QCD symmetry structure constrains dark QCD meson spectra, so that the dark η′-like meson would only be accessible at the collider experiments. Still, the Belle II and Electron ion collider experiments can have a high enough sensitivity to probe the dark η′-like meson in the diphoton channel, which dominantly arises from the mixing with the QCD η′ and the pionic composite axion. We also briefly address nontrivial cosmological aspects, such as those related to the dark-chiral phase transition, the dark matter production, and an ultraviolet completion related to the ultralight ALP.
Kaho T., Sakakibara K., Arimura M., Watanabe S.
Artificial Life and Robotics scimago Q3 wos Q4
2025-01-11 citations by CoLab: 0 Abstract  
This study models garbage collection in a local city in Hokkaido, Japan, driven by the increasing burden of collection costs despite a declining population. A unique problem in this city is the large number of garbage stations, which exacerbates the collection burden. We examine the impact of waste volume fluctuations and the number and layout of garbage stations on collection routes and costs to find solutions to this issue. This research aims to develop cost-effective and feasible garbage collection strategies to support evidence-based policymaking. We formulated a garbage collection challenge using mixed integer linear programming to minimize travel distances and operational burdens within vehicle capacity constraints. Numerical simulations reveal significant findings: (i) optimized routes reduce total travel distance by $$\sim$$ 25% compared to existing routes, (ii) increased waste volumes lead to non-linear increases in route lengths, and (iii) the aggregation strength of garbage stations significantly impacts route efficiency and the number of required stations. Conclusively, this study provides empirical evidence to guide policymakers in optimizing garbage collection systems, ensuring effective resource utilization and maintaining service quality.
Khangkhachit W., Shirai S., Iwasaki G., Asano Y.
ACS Omega scimago Q2 wos Q2 Open Access
2025-01-10 citations by CoLab: 0 PDF
Kise S., Morita S., Sakaki T., Kimura H., Kinuya S., Yasuda K.
2025-01-06 citations by CoLab: 1 PDF Abstract  
Recently, we demonstrated that the alopecia observed in vitamin D receptor gene-deficient (Vdr-KO) rats is not seen in rats with a mutant VDR(R270L/H301Q), which lacks ligand-binding ability, suggesting that the ligand-independent action of VDR plays a crucial role in maintaining the hair cycle. Since Vdr-KO rats also showed abnormalities in the skin, the relationship between alopecia and skin abnormalities was examined. To clarify the mechanism of actions of vitamin D and VDR in the skin, protein composition, and gene expression patterns in the skin were compared among Vdr-KO, Vdr-R270L/H301Q, and wild-type (WT) rats. While Vdr-R270L/H301Q rats exhibited normal skin formation similar to WT rats, Vdr-KO rats showed remarkable hyperkeratosis and trans-epidermal water loss in the skin. RNA sequencing and proteomic analysis revealed that the gene and protein expression patterns in Vdr-KO rats significantly differed from those in WT and Vdr-R270L/H301Q rats, with a marked decrease in the expression of factors involved in Shh, Wnt, and Bmp signaling pathways, a dramatic reduction in the expression of hair keratins, and a substantial increase in the expression of epidermal keratins. This study clearly demonstrated that non-liganded VDR is significantly involved in the differentiation, proliferation, and cell death of keratinocytes in hair follicles and the epidermis.
Nime M.J., Yamamura H., Hayakawa M., Matsuura N., Oku N., Igarashi Y.
Journal of Antibiotics scimago Q3 wos Q3
2025-01-06 citations by CoLab: 0 Abstract  
Two new benzene-containing polyketides, cryptoic acids A (1) and B (2), along with a new acylated diketopiperazine designated cyclocryptamide (3), were isolated from the culture extract of Cryptosporangium sp. YDKA-T02. The absolute configuration of amino acid components in 3 was determined by Marfey’s method. While 3 was not cytotoxic and inactive against microbial test strains, 1 and 2 showed PPARγ agonistic activity in a reporter gene assay and cytotoxicity against P388 murine leukemia cells.
Takita T., Wada M., Yamagata M., Kamata S., Mizutani K., Yogo Y., Hamada M., Yasuda K., Mikami B., Sakaki T., Yasukawa K.
Biochemistry scimago Q1 wos Q3
2025-01-03 citations by CoLab: 0
Nakazawa K., Nagafuchi O., Mitsui A., Watanabe T., Hishida N., Tsujimoto M., Imura S.
Environmental Science Advances scimago Q2 wos Q2 Open Access
2025-01-01 citations by CoLab: 0 PDF Abstract  
In January 2022, gaseous elemental Hg (GEM) concentrations were continuously monitored at Syowa Station on East Ongul Island, located ∼4 km from the continent on the eastern coast of Lützow-Holm Bay in the Antarctic region.
Zhang Y., Yang Y., Takizawa S., Kuroda K., Jia Z., Liu P., Wei H., Graham N.J.
2025-01-01 citations by CoLab: 1 Abstract  
The simultaneously efficient removal of radionuclides and heavy metals is an important and challenging topic for aquatic environmental protection. In this work, molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) with heavy metal ion adsorption capacity and positively charged polyethyleneimine (PEI) were used to fabricate a novel layer-by-layer (LbL) self-assembly composite membrane by a simple alternating immersion method. The unique structure with positive charge ensures high removal for toxic metals (RCs(I) = 99.83 %, RSr(II) = 100 %, RHg(II) = 99.2 %, RPb(II) = 98.13 %, RAs(III) = 98.5 %). The inherent low resistance channels in MoS2 provided the optimized composite membrane an elevated water flux. Long-term experiments and membrane regeneration also demonstrated that the membrane possesses exceptional stability and reusability in removing low levels of radionuclides Cs(I) and Sr(II) from water. This study confirms the feasibility of the MoS2-PEI composite membrane for the treatment of contaminated waters containing radionuclides and heavy metals.

Since 1991

Total publications
2783
Total citations
43397
Citations per publication
15.59
Average publications per year
81.85
Average authors per publication
5.51
h-index
78
Metrics description

Top-30

Fields of science

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Biochemistry, 380, 13.65%
General Medicine, 327, 11.75%
Molecular Biology, 297, 10.67%
Organic Chemistry, 280, 10.06%
Condensed Matter Physics, 279, 10.03%
Mechanical Engineering, 252, 9.05%
General Materials Science, 226, 8.12%
Biotechnology, 222, 7.98%
Mechanics of Materials, 217, 7.8%
General Physics and Astronomy, 211, 7.58%
Drug Discovery, 194, 6.97%
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, 194, 6.97%
General Engineering, 184, 6.61%
Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 172, 6.18%
Pharmacology, 166, 5.96%
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials, 156, 5.61%
Materials Chemistry, 141, 5.07%
General Chemistry, 138, 4.96%
Analytical Chemistry, 116, 4.17%
Molecular Medicine, 109, 3.92%
Bioengineering, 103, 3.7%
Catalysis, 97, 3.49%
Cell Biology, 93, 3.34%
Pharmaceutical Science, 89, 3.2%
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, 86, 3.09%
Genetics, 86, 3.09%
Instrumentation, 75, 2.69%
Metals and Alloys, 69, 2.48%
Computer Science Applications, 69, 2.48%
Microbiology, 67, 2.41%
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With other organizations

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With foreign organizations

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With other countries

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China, 129, 4.64%
USA, 115, 4.13%
Thailand, 63, 2.26%
Germany, 56, 2.01%
United Kingdom, 48, 1.72%
Republic of Korea, 34, 1.22%
France, 29, 1.04%
India, 28, 1.01%
Indonesia, 27, 0.97%
Australia, 17, 0.61%
Spain, 16, 0.57%
Finland, 15, 0.54%
Sweden, 15, 0.54%
Canada, 13, 0.47%
Egypt, 12, 0.43%
Sri Lanka, 12, 0.43%
Belgium, 11, 0.4%
South Africa, 11, 0.4%
Netherlands, 9, 0.32%
New Zealand, 8, 0.29%
Bangladesh, 6, 0.22%
Italy, 6, 0.22%
Cuba, 6, 0.22%
Poland, 6, 0.22%
Switzerland, 6, 0.22%
Russia, 5, 0.18%
Vietnam, 5, 0.18%
Norway, 5, 0.18%
Saudi Arabia, 5, 0.18%
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  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated daily.
  • Publications published earlier than 1991 are ignored in the statistics.
  • The horizontal charts show the 30 top positions.
  • Journals quartiles values are relevant at the moment.