P
Philip L. Smith
Researcher at University of Melbourne
Publications - 296
Citations - 26439
Philip L. Smith is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Obstructive sleep apnea & Sleep apnea. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 291 publications receiving 24842 citations. Previous affiliations of Philip L. Smith include University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee & Monash University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical guidelines on the identification, evaluation, and treatment of overweight and obesity in adults: Executive summary
F. X. Pi-Sunyer,Diane M. Becker,Claude Bouchard,Richard A. Carleton,Graham A. Colditz,William H. Dietz,John P. Foreyt,R. J. Garrison,Scott M. Grundy,Barbara C. Hansen,Millicent Higgins,James O. Hill,Barbara V. Howard,Robert J. Kuczmarski,Shiriki K. Kumanyika,R. D. Legako,T. E. Prewitt,A. P. Rocchini,Philip L. Smith,Linda Snetselaar,James R. Sowers,M. Weintrub,Don Williamson,G. T. Wilson,Clinton D. Brown,Karen A. Donato,Nancy D. Ernst,D. R. Hill,Michael J. Horan,Van S. Hubbard,J. P. Kiley,Eva Obarzanek,D. Shriger,E. Chiquette +33 more
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Objective Measurement of Patterns of Nasal CPAP Use by Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea
N. B. Kribbs,Allan I. Pack,Lewis R. Kline,Philip L. Smith,Alan R. Schwartz,Norman Schubert,Susan Redline,John N. Henry,Joanne E. Getsy,David F. Dinges +9 more
TL;DR: Although the majority (60%) of patients claimed to use CPAP nightly, only 16 of 35 patients met criteria for regular use, defined by at least 4 h of CPAP administered on 70% of the days monitored, and these 16 patients had more years of education, and were more likely to work in professional occupations.
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A comparison of sequential sampling models for two-choice reaction time
Roger Ratcliff,Philip L. Smith +1 more
TL;DR: Although there was substantial model mimicry, empirical conditions were identified under which the models make discriminably different predictions and the best accounts of the data were provided by the Wiener diffusion model, the OU model with small-to-moderate decay, and the accumulator model with long-tailed distributions of criteria.
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Psychology and neurobiology of simple decisions
Philip L. Smith,Roger Ratcliff +1 more
TL;DR: Patterns of neural firing linked to eye movement decisions show that behavioral decisions are predicted by the differential firing rates of cells coding selected and nonselected stimulus alternatives, which provides a quantitative link between the time-course of behavioral decisions and the growth of stimulus information in neural firing data.
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Diffusion Decision Model: Current Issues and History
TL;DR: This review relates the diffusion models to both earlier and more recent research in psychology to examine individual differences in cognitive and neural processes of speeded decision making.