Sensors and Actuators, B: Chemical, ‎0925-4005

Journal

  1. A microsystem for growth inhibition test of Enterococcus faecalis based on impedance measurement

    Spiller, E., Schöll, A., Alexy, R., Kümmerer, K. & Urban , A. G., 25.10.2006, In: Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical. 118, 1-2, p. 182-191 10 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Publications

  1. A Transatlantic Symposium on the Restatement (Fourth)
  2. Principals between exploitation and exploration
  3. Sustainable Development
  4. Interpersonal Physiological Synchrony Predicts Group Cohesion
  5. Der "fachdidaktische Code" der Lebenswelt- und/oder (?) Situationsorientierung
  6. Glancing into the Applied Tool Box
  7. Credit Constraints and the Extensive Margins of Exports
  8. About the Sense of Useless Software
  9. Tree-tree interactions and crown complementarity
  10. Effects on the (CSR) Reputation
  11. Gender perspectives in resilience, vulnerability and adaptation to global environmental change
  12. Quality Assurance of Specification - The Users Point of View
  13. Predictive modeling in e-mental health
  14. Modernization
  15. Influences of yttrium content on microstructure and mechanical properties of as-cast Mg–Ca–Y–Zr alloys
  16. It is not what it is
  17. Rating Player Actions in Soccer
  18. Solution for spillway chute aeration through bottom aerators
  19. Agile: Mehr als nur eine Methode?
  20. Video-, Text- oder Live-Coaching?
  21. Knowledge Production in Consulting Teams: A Self-Organization Approach
  22. Remotely sensed effectiveness assessments of protected areas lack a common framework
  23. Being in the Game; Language Teachers as Digital Learners
  24. Pragmatics broadly viewed
  25. Genetically based differentiation in growth of multiple non-native plant species along a steep environmental gradient
  26. Integration of Sustainability into Universities - Good Practices and Benchmarking for Integration
  27. Governance statt Management oder: Management der Governance
  28. The impact of partially missing communities on the reliability of centrality measures