7,841 research outputs found
Hepatitis B viral load as a prognostic factor for patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma.
Viremia profiles in HBV carrier children with spontaneous e antigen seroconversion: A case of deja vu?
To genotype or not to genotype: toward an optimal tailoring treatment of chronic hepatitis B.
Modulation of morphology and functions of human hepatoblastoma cells by nano-grooved substrata
On co-authorship for author disambiguation
Author name disambiguation deals with clustering the same-name authors into different individuals. To attack the problem, many studies have employed a variety of disambiguation features such as coauthors, titles of papers/publications, topics of articles, emails/affiliations, etc. Among these, co-authorship is the most easily accessible and influential, since inter-person acquaintances represented by co-authorship could discriminate the identities of authors more clearly than other features. This study attempts to explore the net effects of co-authorship on author clustering in bibliographic data. First, to handle the shortage of explicit coauthors listed in known citations, a web-assisted technique of acquiring implicit coauthors of the target author to be disambiguated is proposed. Then, a coauthor disambiguation hypothesis that the identity of an author can be determined by his/her coauthors is examined and confirmed through a variety of author disambiguation experiments. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.X1174sciescopu
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