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Ben Desbrow
Researcher at Griffith University
Publications - 172
Citations - 4858
Ben Desbrow is an academic researcher from Griffith University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Athletes & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 164 publications receiving 4111 citations. Previous affiliations of Ben Desbrow include Deakin University & Australian Institute of Sport.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Using Alcohol Intoxication Goggles (Fatal Vision Goggles) to Detect Alcohol Related Impairment in Simulated Driving
TL;DR: FVGs may have some utility in replicating alcohol-related impairment on specific driving performance measurements and may offer an alternative approach to researching the impact of alcohol intoxication on simulated driving performance among populations where the provision of alcohol would otherwise be unethical.
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Muscle fiber typology is associated with the incidence of overreaching in response to overload training
Phillip Bellinger,Phillip Bellinger,Ben Desbrow,Wim Derave,Eline Lievens,Christopher Irwin,Surendran Sabapathy,Ben Kennedy,Jonathan Craven,Evan Noel Pennell,Hal Rice,Clare Minahan +11 more
TL;DR: Muscle fiber typology is related to the incidence of overreaching and performance super-compensation following increased training volume and a taper and was associated with changes in running TTE from pre- to post-HVTr (r=-0.55, p=0.008).
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An evaluation of clinical dietetic student placement case-mix exposure, service delivery and supervisory burden
Roger Michael Hughes,Ben Desbrow +1 more
TL;DR: Cost–benefit estimates indicate that a student needs to be over 80% as time efficient throughout the placement as a new graduate to offset the costs of direct student supervision.
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Personal trainers are confident in their ability to provide nutrition care: a cross-sectional investigation
TL;DR: Personal trainers feel confident in their ability and show favourable attitudes towards providing nutrition care to clients, suggesting this workforce has the potential to support lifestyle modification for chronic disease prevention.
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Fluid, energy and nutrient recovery via ad libitum intake of different fluids and food
Nadia Campagnolo,Elizaveta Iudakhina,Christopher Irwin,Matthew M. Schubert,Gregory R. Cox,Michael Leveritt,Ben Desbrow +6 more
TL;DR: With the co-ingestion of food, fluid restoration following exercise is tightly regulated and not influenced by the choice of either water, a carbohydrate-electrolyte (sports drink) or a milk-based beverage.