Automated Organization ProfileUniversity of Ljubljana
University of Ljubljana
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets in this organization
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the organization's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the organization's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 569.5 (sum of 537 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
PoeTree is a dataset comprising nearly 335,000 poems / 90,000,000 tokens in 11 languages (Czech, English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, Slovenian, and Russian). Each corpus has been deduplicated, enriched with Universal Dependencies, provided with additional metadata and converted into a unified JSON structure (schema available at https://versologie.cz/poetree/json-schema).cs (~80k poems)derived from Corpus of Czech Versede (~74k poems)derived from Metricalizer and Deutsches Lyrik Korpusen (~40k poems)based on texts from Project Gutenberges (~9k poems)derived from Corpus of Spanish Golden-Age Sonnets and Diachronic Spanish Sonnet Corpusfr (~18k poems)derived from Malherbəhu (~13k poems)derived from ELTE Poetry Corpusit (~40k poems)derived from Biblioteca Italianano (~3k poems)derived from NORN Poemspt (~5k poems)derived from Poemasru (~45k poems)derived from Corpus of Russian Poetrysl (~5k poem)based on texts from wikisourcenew in v. 1.0.0:PoeTree.no addedPoeTree.(cs,de,en,fr,hu,it,ru,sl) enriched with geolocation mentionsUpdated and corrected metadata in PoeTree.(de,en,es,ru)Multiple text corrections in PoeTree.ru
Authors
- Plecháč, Petr ;
- Šeļa, Artjoms ;
- Bermúdez Sabel, Helena ;
- Bobenhausen, Klemens ;
- Cinková, Silvie ;
- Dale, Ingerid Løyning ;
- Delente, Éliane ;
- De Sisto, Mirella ;
- Haider, Thomas ;
- Hammerich, Benjamin ;
- Horváth, Péter ;
- Kvinnsland, Ranveig ;
- Kočnik, Neža ;
- Kolár, Robert ;
- Korchagin, Kirill ;
- Martynenko, Antonina ;
- Mittmann, Adiel ;
- Nagy, Benjamin ;
- Navarro Colorado, Borja ;
- Nugues, Lara ;
- Palkó, Gábor ;
- Plungian, Vladimir ;
- Renault, Richard ;
- Ruiz Fabo, Pablo ;
- Seláf, Levente ;
- Sitchinava, Dmitri
The table is the supporting information for a review journal article describing literature about additives that reduce the viscosity of monoclonal antibody (mAb) formulations. The table includes compound names, chemical descriptors of these compounds (SlogP, TPSA (total polar surface area), Average molecular weight, Number of Rotatable Bonds, Number of Hydrogen Bond Donors, Number of Hydrogen Bond Acceptors, Number of Hetero Atoms, Number of Aromatic Rings, Fraction of CSP3), the concentration of the compound that was used in the experiment and viscosity reduction [%]. The latter describes the percentage by which the viscosity of the mAb formulation was reduced when the compound was added relative to the viscosity of the formulation without the added compound. This data was used to find correlation between the molecular descriptors of the compounds and their viscosity-reducing effect as described in the journal article.
Authors
- Prašnikar, Monika ;
- Bjelošević Žiberna, Maja ;
- Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi
The table is the supporting information for a review journal article describing literature about additives that reduce the viscosity of monoclonal antibody (mAb) formulations. The table includes compound names, chemical descriptors of these compounds (SlogP, TPSA (total polar surface area), Average molecular weight, Number of Rotatable Bonds, Number of Hydrogen Bond Donors, Number of Hydrogen Bond Acceptors, Number of Hetero Atoms, Number of Aromatic Rings, Fraction of CSP3), the concentration of the compound that was used in the experiment and viscosity reduction [%]. The latter describes the percentage by which the viscosity of the mAb formulation was reduced when the compound was added relative to the viscosity of the formulation without the added compound. This data was used to find correlation between the molecular descriptors of the compounds and their viscosity-reducing effect as described in the journal article.
Authors
- Prašnikar, Monika ;
- Bjelošević Žiberna, Maja ;
- Ahlin Grabnar, Pegi
We report the discovery of a novel relationship between the Eurasian Scops Owl (Otus scops) and the Worm Snake (Xerotyphlops vermicularis) found during systematic nest box inspections spanning six breeding seasons in central Türkiye. The presence of live Worm Snakes was specific only to nest boxes occupied by Eurasian Scops Owls, which delivered snakes alive to the nest boxes. The snakes were found in 44% of 109 owl nests. While there was no significant difference in clutch or brood size between nests with and without snakes, the presence of snakes in the nest significantly improved the survival rate of owl nestlings, from 29% to 61% in nests without and with snakes, respectively. Insectivorous snakes were found both on and within the nesting material, where they might remove commensal and kleptoparasitic insects, e.g., ants and fly larvae. Several research questions emerge from our findings, since non-consumptive interaction between blind snakes and owls is now known from different parts of the globe. Taken together, these studies suggest that behaviors potentially involving cognitive processes could, over evolutionary timescales, facilitate the emergence of mutualistic interactions through selective predation. Owl nests might be beneficial environments for the insectivorous Worm Snake, but it remains to be determined whether owl-snake interactions are a facultative mutualistic relationship or only misdirected predation or even parasitism, primarily beneficial just for the owls.
Authors
- Göçer, Elif ;
- Johnson, David H. ;
- Bilgin, Cemal Can ;
- Vrezec, Al
Abstract:In this thesis, we were researching the effect of DBD plasma surface treatment on the adhesion of wood and non-wood materials. We examined the changes that occur on the surfaces of the materials after DBD plasma treatment and the impact of these changes on the quality of bonding. The parameters for plasma treatment were determined based on the measurement of contact angles on the surfaces of wood and non-wood materials. After DBD plasma treatment, we analyzed the surfaces of the treated and untreated samples using a laser microscope and XPS technique. We tested the bonded samples of treated and untreated composites according to the standard SIST EN 205:2016 to determine their tensile-shear strength. We found that the surface treatment with DBD plasma improves the properties of most adhesive systems tested in the thesis. Plasma treatment increased the surface energy for all materials, particularly the polar component, which is crucial for good adhesion.
Authors
- Mavec, Klemen
This dataset contains the experimental results supporting the research article "Effects of coating ageing on the acoustic properties of spruce wood (Picea abies)". The study investigates how nitrocellulose and polyurethane surface coatings influence the acoustic and mechanical properties of Norway spruce during a 300-day ageing period. The dataset includes measurements of gloss, hardness, impact resistance, resonance frequencies, vibration damping (tanδ), and acoustic conversion efficiency (ACE). These data provide insight into the relationships between coating ageing, surface mechanics, and acoustic performance, and may serve as a reference for further studies on resonance wood and instrument making.
Authors
- Straže, Aleš ;
- Žigon, Jure ;
- Pavlič, Matjaž
This dataset contains the experimental results supporting the research article "Effects of coating ageing on the acoustic properties of spruce wood (Picea abies)". The study investigates how nitrocellulose and polyurethane surface coatings influence the acoustic and mechanical properties of Norway spruce during a 300-day ageing period. The dataset includes measurements of gloss, hardness, impact resistance, resonance frequencies, vibration damping (tanδ), and acoustic conversion efficiency (ACE). These data provide insight into the relationships between coating ageing, surface mechanics, and acoustic performance, and may serve as a reference for further studies on resonance wood and instrument making.
Authors
- Straže, Aleš ;
- Žigon, Jure ;
- Pavlič, Matjaž
Dataset obtained within a PhD studies in Biomedicine at University of Ljubljana, Slovenia by PhD candidate Marija Gjorgoska.
Authors
- Gjorgoska, Marija
Dataset obtained within a PhD studies in Biomedicine at University of Ljubljana, Slovenia by PhD candidate Marija Gjorgoska.
Authors
- Gjorgoska, Marija
This repository contains the full set of data and models used in the cost–benefit analysis (CBA) of proposed cycling highways in Ljubljana, Slovenia. The files include mode choice modelling, construction and land acquisition cost estimates, the main CBA model, and sensitivity analysis. An example output file is also provided for verification. The repository ensures full transparency and reproducibility of results and was prepared for submission to the European Transport Research Review (ETRR), topical collection Reproducible Research in Transport.
Authors
- Strnad Trček, Irena