Author
H.-J Klimisch
Bio: H.-J Klimisch is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reliability (statistics). The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 825 citations.
Topics: Reliability (statistics)
Papers
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TL;DR: Criteria relating to international testing standards for categorizing reliability are developed and a systematic documentation of evaluating reliability especially for use in the IUCLID database is proposed.
927 citations
Cited by
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TL;DR: More high quality data is needed on the occurrence of microplastics in drinking water, to better understand potential exposure and to inform human health risk assessments, and there is a significant need to improve quality assurance ofmicroplastic sampling and analysis in water samples.
1,148 citations
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Research Institute for Fragrance Materials1, Columbia University Medical Center2, Malmö University3, University of Nebraska–Lincoln4, University of São Paulo5, University of Würzburg6, Oregon Health & Science University7, International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.8, Symrise9, Vanderbilt University10, Kyoto University11, Takasago International Corporation12, University of Tennessee13, University of Arizona14
TL;DR: This publication is designed to update the RifM safety assessment process, which follows a series of decision trees, reflecting advances in approaches in risk assessment and new and classical toxicological methodologies employed by RIFM over the past ten years.
1,148 citations
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TL;DR: The status of bioaccumulation assessment is important in the scientific evaluation of risks that chemicals may pose to humans and the environment and is a current focus of regulatory effort as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Bioaccumulation assessment is important in the scientific evaluation of risks that chemicals may pose to humans and the environment and is a current focus of regulatory effort. The status of bioacc...
1,106 citations
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TL;DR: This work expands the database of chemicals with reproductive and developmental data, presents these data in a comprehensive and transparent format and groups the chemicals according to the TTC "Cramer Class" rules.
915 citations
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TL;DR: Templates, developed from work to prepare for the application of new toxicological data to read-across assessment, are presented and act as proposals to assist in assessing similarity in the context of chemistry, toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics as well as to guide the systematic characterisation of uncertainty.
896 citations