Institution
Auckland University of Technology
Education•Auckland, New Zealand•
About: Auckland University of Technology is a education organization based out in Auckland, New Zealand. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 4116 authors who have published 13461 publications receiving 353076 citations. The organization is also known as: AUT & AUT University.
Topics: Population, Context (language use), Poison control, Health care, Tourism
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: The findings suggest that a neoprene lumbar brace improves the somatosensory information received by the central nervous system and results in less error in trunk positioning.
87 citations
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TL;DR: The results highlight how weak forms of customary management can result in the rapid decline of vulnerable fisheries around urbanized regions, and present examples in which working customary management systems can positively affect the conservation of parrotfish--and reef fisheries in general--in the highly biodiverse Coral Triangle region.
Abstract: Increasing migration into urbanized centers in the Solomon Islands poses a great threat to adjacent coral reef fisheries because of negative effects on the fisheries and because it further erodes customary management systems. Parrotfish fisheries are of particular importance because the feeding habits of parrotfish (scrape and excavate coral) are thought to be critical to the resilience of coral reefs and to maintaining coral reef health within marine protected areas. We investigated the ecological impact of localized subsistence and artisanal fishing pressure on parrotfish fisheries in Gizo Town, Western Solomon Islands, by analyzing the density and size distribution of parrotfishwith an underwater visual census (UVC), recall diary (i.e., interviews with fishers), and creel surveys to independently assess changes in abundance and catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) over 2 years. We then compared parrotfish data from Gizo Town with equivalent data from sites open to and closed to fishing in Kida and Nusa Hope villages, which have different customary management regimes. Results indicated a gradient of customary management effectiveness. Parrotfish abundance was greater in customary management areas closed to fishing, especially with regard to larger fish sizes, than in areas open to fishing. The decline in parrotfish abundance from 2004 to 2005 in Gizo was roughly the same magnitude as the difference in abundance decline between inside and outside customary management marine reserves.
Our results highlight how weak forms of customary management can result in the rapid decline of vulnerable
fisheries around urbanized regions, and we present examples in which working customary management systems (Kinda and Nusa Hope) can positively affect the conservation of parrotfish—and reef fisheries in general—in the highly biodiverse Coral Triangle region.
87 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether textured surfaces alter postural stability and lower limb muscle activity during quiet bipedal standing balance with eyes open, and found that texture did not significantly affect AP or ML postural sway in comparison to the control condition (p>0.05).
87 citations
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TL;DR: The association between HRV and risk stratification is addressed by reviewing the current evidence from data acquired by resting ECG, exercise ECG and medical ambulatory devices, followed by a discussion of the use of HRV to guide the training of athletes and as a part of fitness programmes.
Abstract: It has been demonstrated that heart rate variability (HRV) is predictive of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality using clinical ECG recordings. This is true for rest, exercise and ambulatory HRV clinical ECG device recordings in prospective cohorts. Recently, there has been a rapid increase in the use of mobile health technologies (mHealth) and commercial wearable fitness devices. Most of these devices use ECG or photo-based plethysmography and both are validated for providing accurate heart rate measurements. This offers the opportunity to make risk information from HRV more widely available. The physiology of HRV and the available technology by which it can be assessed has been summarised in Part 1 of this review. In Part 2 the association between HRV and risk stratification is addressed by reviewing the current evidence from data acquired by resting ECG, exercise ECG and medical ambulatory devices. This is followed by a discussion of the use of HRV to guide the training of athletes and as a part of fitness programmes.
87 citations
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TL;DR: Home-based physical therapy intervention appears to be a viable option for patients with sprained ankles, and both groups had similar scores for post-treatment ankle function, adherence, and motivation.
Abstract: Background and Purpose: To some extent, favorable treatment outcomes for physical therapy intervention programs depend on patients attending their clinic appointments and adhering to the program requirements. Previous studies have found less-than-optimal levels of clinic attendance, and a viable option might be physical therapy intervention programs with a large component of home treatment. This study investigated the effects of a standard physical therapy intervention program—delivered primarily at either the clinic or home—on ankle function, rehabilitation adherence, and motivation in patients with ankle sprains.
Subjects: Forty-seven people with acute ankle sprains who were about to start a course of physical therapy intervention participated in the study.
Methods: Using a prospective design, subjects were randomly assigned to either a clinic intervention group or a home intervention group. Ankle function and motivation were measured before and after rehabilitation, and adherence to the clinic- and home-based programs was measured throughout the study.
Results: The groups had similar scores for post-treatment ankle function, adherence, and motivation. The home intervention group had a significantly higher percentage of attendance at clinic appointments and better physical therapy intervention program completion rate.
Discussion and Conclusion: Home-based physical therapy intervention appears to be a viable option for patients with sprained ankles.
86 citations
Authors
Showing all 4215 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Peter W.F. Wilson | 181 | 680 | 139852 |
Jun Lu | 135 | 1526 | 99767 |
David Zhang | 111 | 1027 | 55118 |
Valery L. Feigin | 107 | 377 | 135162 |
John A. Hawley | 91 | 358 | 28300 |
Hylton B. Menz | 79 | 443 | 22778 |
M. Pedersen | 76 | 362 | 19658 |
Will G. Hopkins | 74 | 305 | 27727 |
Debra Jackson | 72 | 792 | 21534 |
Hao Wu | 71 | 1153 | 23162 |
W. van Straten | 69 | 204 | 15366 |
Alexis Elbaz | 69 | 205 | 27260 |
Jie Tang | 68 | 466 | 18934 |
Suzanne Barker-Collo | 64 | 195 | 101159 |
Weihua Li | 63 | 548 | 15136 |