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Ye Liu
Researcher at Sun Yat-sen University
Publications - 91
Citations - 3919
Ye Liu is an academic researcher from Sun Yat-sen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neighbourhood (mathematics) & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 86 publications receiving 2010 citations. Previous affiliations of Ye Liu include University of Lethbridge & The Chinese University of Hong Kong.
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Deciphering the meaning and mechanism of migrants' and locals' neighborhood attachment in Chinese cities: Evidence from Guangzhou
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as discussed by the authors explored the meaning and mechanism of neighborhood attachment through the combination of both structure equation modelling and qualitative analysis, and found that local residents have stronger attachment to their neighborhoods than migrants.
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Exploring the links between population density, lifestyle, and being overweight: secondary data analyses of middle-aged and older Chinese adults
TL;DR: There was a positive association between neighbourhood population density and middle-aged and older adults’ risk of being overweight, and this relationship may exist because people who live in densely populated neighbourhoods tend to lead a sedentary lifestyle.
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The Effects of Health on the Settlement Intention of Rural–Urban Migrants: Evidence from Eight Chinese Cities
TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper examined the extent to which the health of rural-urban migrants influences their settlement intention in the cities chosen as their destinations, and found that physical and mental health play crucial roles in shaping the settlement intention of migrants, but their effects are not always identical in cases of short and long-term intentions.
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Neighborhood governance in post-reform Urban China: Place attachment impact on civic engagement in Guangzhou
TL;DR: The heterogeneity in residents’ place attachment and the institutional barriers to civic engagement are outlined, which implies that the hukou system still restricts migrants’ participation, so neighborhood governance policy-makers should seek to address this hukOU constraint in urban China.
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The association between spatial access to physical activity facilities within home and workplace neighborhoods and time spent on physical activities: evidence from Guangzhou, China.
TL;DR: Investigating the links between the spatial access to PA facilities within home/workplace neighborhoods and time spent on PA among working adults in Guangzhou contributes to the knowledge of PA-promoting environments by considering both the home and workplace contexts and by taking into account the temporal attributes of contextual influences.