Automated Author ProfileHu, Rui
Hu, Rui
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author'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: 5.6 (sum of 9 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
This dataset represents a subset of the YakPoseDatasets, specifically designed for yak heifer pose estimation research. The dataset contains 180 images of yak heifers along with their corresponding annotation files. All annotations were manually created using the Labelme software.
Authors
- Li, Jiazhou ;
- Yang, Yuxiang ;
- Yao, Yao ;
- Zou, Huawei ;
- Guo, Xi ;
- Xiao, Jianxin ;
- Hu, Rui ;
- Cheng, Shijing ;
- Wang, Yipeng ;
- Peng, Yingqi ;
- Wang, Zhisheng
This dataset represents a subset of the YakPoseDatasets, specifically designed for yak heifer pose estimation research. The dataset contains 180 images of yak heifers along with their corresponding annotation files. All annotations were manually created using the Labelme software.
Authors
- Li, Jiazhou ;
- Yang, Yuxiang ;
- Yao, Yao ;
- Zou, Huawei ;
- Guo, Xi ;
- Xiao, Jianxin ;
- Hu, Rui ;
- Cheng, Shijing ;
- Wang, Yipeng ;
- Peng, Yingqi ;
- Wang, Zhisheng
A total number of 160,820 unique transcripts (50% protein-coding) representing 34,882 unique genes (60% protein-coding) were identified across tissues. Among them, 118,563 transcripts (73% of the total) were structurally validated by independent datasets (PacBio Iso-seq data, ONT-seq data, de novo assembled transcripts from RNA-seq data) and comparison with Ensembl and NCBI gene sets. In addition, all transcripts were supported by extensive data from different technologies such as WTTS-seq, RAMPAGE, ChIP-seq, and ATAC-seq. A large proportion of identified transcripts (69%) were un-annotated, of which 86% were produced by annotated genes and 14% by un-annotated genes. A median of two 5 untranslated regions were expressed per gene. Around 50% of protein-coding genes in each tissue were bifunctional and transcribed both coding and noncoding isoforms.
Furthermore, we identified 3,744 genes that functioned as non-coding genes in fetal tissues, but as protein coding genes in adult tissues. Our new bovine genome annotation extended more than 11,000 annotated gene borders compared to Ensembl or NCBI annotations. The resulting bovine transcriptome was integrated with publicly available QTL data to study tissue-tissue interconnection involved in different traits and construct the first bovine trait similarity network. These validated results show significant improvement over current bovine genome annotations.
Authors
- Beiki, Hamid ;
- Murdoch, Brenda, M ;
- Park, Carissa, A ;
- Kern, Chandlar ;
- Kontechy, Denise ;
- Becker, Gabrielle ;
- Rincon, Gonzalo ;
- Jiang, Honglin ;
- Zhou, Huaijun ;
- Thorne, Jacob ;
- Koltes, James, E ;
- Michal, Jennifer, J ;
- Davenport, Kimberly, M ;
- Rijnkels, Monique ;
- Ross, Pablo, J ;
- Hu, Rui ;
- Corum, Sarah ;
- McKay, Stephanie, D ;
- Smith, Timothy, PL ;
- Liu, Wansheng ;
- Ma, Wenzhi ;
- Zhang, Xiaohui ;
- Xu, Xiaoqing ;
- Han, Xuelei ;
- Jiang, Zhihua ;
- Hu, Zhi-Liang ;
- Reecy, James
No description available
Authors
- Hu, Rui
An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures.
Authors
- Hu, Rui ;
- Gao, Jie ;
- Rozimamat, Rushangul ;
- Aisa, Haji Akber
An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures.
Authors
- Hu, Rui
An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures.
Authors
- Hu, Rui
Recent studies have demonstrated that thermoregulatory behavior occurs not only in post-hatching turtles, but also prior to hatching. Does thermoregulatory behavior also occur in the embryos of other reptile and bird species? Our experiments show that such behavior is widespread but not universal in reptile and bird embryos. We recorded repositioning within the egg, in response to thermal gradients, in the embryos of three species of snakes (Xenochrophis piscator, Elaphe bimaculata, and Zaocys dhumnades), two turtles (Chelydra serpentina and Ocadia sinensis), one crocodile (Alligator sinensis), and four birds (Coturnix coturnix, Gallus gallus domesticus, Columba livia domestica and Anas platyrhynchos domestica). However, we detected no significant thermoregulation by the embryos of two lizard species (Takydromus septentrionalis and Phrynocephalus frontalis). Overall, embryonic thermoregulatory behavior is widespread in reptile as well as bird species, but may be unimportant in the small eggs laid by most lizards.
Authors
- Li, Teng ;
- Zhao, Bo ;
- Zhou, Yong-Kang ;
- Hu, Rui ;
- Du, Wei-Guo