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Andrew R. Gray

Researcher at University of Otago

Publications -  314
Citations -  9323

Andrew R. Gray is an academic researcher from University of Otago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 306 publications receiving 8102 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew R. Gray include University of Florida.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of regular consumption of different forms of almonds and hazelnuts on acceptance and blood lipids

TL;DR: In conclusion, acceptance was stable for all combinations but was highest for whole nuts, and six weeks of nut consumption improved blood lipids.
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Developing and validating a measure of community capacity: Why volunteers make the best neighbours.

TL;DR: Differences were present between the four towns in unadjusted models and remained statistically significant in adjusted models suggesting, crucially, that even when such factors are accounted for, perceptions of one's community may still depend on place.
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Early Intervention to Encourage Physical Activity in Infants and Toddlers: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

TL;DR: An early life intervention targeting improvements in child and parent physical activity as part of a wider obesity prevention initiative had little effect on physical activity at 2 yr of age.

GQM++ A Full Life Cycle Framework for the Development and Implementation of Software Metric Programs

TL;DR: It is the contention however, that GQM only takes us some way to the development of a feasible program, and that there are other considerations that should be made before embarking on organisation-wide collection schemes, including an explicit acknowledgment of the costs and benefits of data collection, the specification of potential modelling and analysis methods, and the determination of how any results might be ‘ fed back’ into the process.
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Do young children consistently meet 24-h sleep and activity guidelines? A longitudinal analysis using actigraphy.

TL;DR: Although adherence to general sleep and activity guidelines was high, few children had regular sleep patterns and adherence to meeting all three guidelines at earlier ages was not related to BMI z-score or body composition at age 5, either cross sectionally or prospectively.