Institution
Australian National University
Education•Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia•
About: Australian National University is a education organization based out in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 34419 authors who have published 109261 publications receiving 4315448 citations. The organization is also known as: The Australian National University & ANU.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Context (language use), Politics, Stars
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a series of recommended procedures for comparing sets of radiocarbon determinations from the same and from adjacent strata or sites, and combine these where statistical and archaeological criteria indicate that this combination is warranted.
Abstract: Archaeologists, along with other Quaternary researchers, seldom rely upon a single radiocarbon determination to provide an estimate of the age of the phenomenon which is the object of their study. There is an evident need for an explicitly formulated procedure for comparing sets of radiocarbon determinations from the same and from adjacent strata or sites, and for combining these where statistical and archaeological criteria indicate that this combination is warranted. The present contribution provides explicit modelling for a series of recommended procedures, a critique of previous methods, and paradigms for application of the recommended procedures.
857 citations
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University of Western Australia1, Curtin University2, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation3, Australian Institute of Marine Science4, Australian Museum5, Australian National University6, Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom7, University of Canterbury8, University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria9
TL;DR: It is shown that extreme warming of a temperate kelp forest off Australia resulted not only in its collapse, but also in a shift in community composition that brought about an increase in herbivorous tropical fishes that prevent the reestablishment of kelp.
Abstract: Ecosystem reconfigurations arising from climate-driven changes in species distributions are expected to have profound ecological, social, and economic implications. Here we reveal a rapid climate-driven regime shift of Australian temperate reef communities, which lost their defining kelp forests and became dominated by persistent seaweed turfs. After decades of ocean warming, extreme marine heat waves forced a 100-kilometer range contraction of extensive kelp forests and saw temperate species replaced by seaweeds, invertebrates, corals, and fishes characteristic of subtropical and tropical waters. This community-wide tropicalization fundamentally altered key ecological processes, suppressing the recovery of kelp forests.
856 citations
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13 Apr 1999TL;DR: The control of epidemics and modelling spread and its cessation, and the role of stochastic models in this and other models, are studied.
Abstract: Preface 1. Some history 2. Deterministic models 3. Stochastic models in continuous time 4. Stochastic models in discrete time 5. Rumours: modelling spread and its cessation 6. Fitting epidemic data 7. The control of epidemics References and author index Subject index.
853 citations
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TL;DR: It is suggested that p-hacking probably does not drastically alter scientific consensuses drawn from meta-analyses, and its effect seems to be weak relative to the real effect sizes being measured.
Abstract: A focus on novel, confirmatory, and statistically significant results leads to substantial bias in the scientific literature. One type of bias, known as “p-hacking,” occurs when researchers collect or select data or statistical analyses until nonsignificant results become significant. Here, we use text-mining to demonstrate that p-hacking is widespread throughout science. We then illustrate how one can test for p-hacking when performing a meta-analysis and show that, while p-hacking is probably common, its effect seems to be weak relative to the real effect sizes being measured. This result suggests that p-hacking probably does not drastically alter scientific consensuses drawn from meta-analyses.
852 citations
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TL;DR: It is revealed that metasurfaces created by seemingly different lattices of (dielectric or metallic) meta-atoms with broken in-plane symmetry can support sharp high-Q resonances arising from a distortion of symmetry-protected bound states in the continuum.
Abstract: We reveal that metasurfaces created by seemingly different lattices of (dielectric or metallic) meta-atoms with broken in-plane symmetry can support sharp high-$Q$ resonances arising from a distortion of symmetry-protected bound states in the continuum. We develop a rigorous theory of such asymmetric periodic structures and demonstrate a link between the bound states in the continuum and Fano resonances. Our results suggest the way for smart engineering of resonances in metasurfaces for many applications in nanophotonics and metaoptics.
851 citations
Authors
Showing all 34925 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Cyrus Cooper | 204 | 1869 | 206782 |
Nicholas G. Martin | 192 | 1770 | 161952 |
David R. Williams | 178 | 2034 | 138789 |
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski | 169 | 1431 | 128585 |
Anton M. Koekemoer | 168 | 1127 | 106796 |
Robert G. Webster | 158 | 843 | 90776 |
Ashok Kumar | 151 | 5654 | 164086 |
Andrew White | 149 | 1494 | 113874 |
Bernhard Schölkopf | 148 | 1092 | 149492 |
Paul Mitchell | 146 | 1378 | 95659 |
Liming Dai | 141 | 781 | 82937 |
Thomas J. Smith | 140 | 1775 | 113919 |
Michael J. Keating | 140 | 1169 | 76353 |
Joss Bland-Hawthorn | 136 | 1114 | 77593 |
Harold A. Mooney | 135 | 450 | 100404 |