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Institution

Brunel University London

EducationLondon, United Kingdom
About: Brunel University London is a education organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Large Hadron Collider & Population. The organization has 10918 authors who have published 29515 publications receiving 893330 citations. The organization is also known as: Brunel & University of Brunel.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review and roadmap to systematically cover the development of IFD following the progress of machine learning theories and offer a future perspective is presented.

1,173 citations

Book
04 Dec 1995
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present Freeing the Voices: A Science of the People 6. Building Sustainable Futures: Science Shops and Social Experiments 7. Science, Citizenship and Troubled Modernity
Abstract: Introduction 1. Science and Citizenship 3. Science, Citizenship and Environmental Threat 4. Witnesses, Participants and Major Accident Hazards 5. Freeing the Voices: A Science of the People 6. Building Sustainable Futures: Science Shops and Social Experiments 7. Science, Citizenship and Troubled Modernity

1,169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the drivers of agility and discuss the portfolio of competitive advantages that have emerged over time as a result of the changing requirements of manufacturing, and highlight some of the key enablers of agility.

1,146 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although life satisfaction is moderately stable over time, life events can have a strong influence on long-term levels of subjective well-being, as shown in the results of a 15-year longitudinal study of more than 24,000 individuals in Germany.
Abstract: According to set-point theories of subjective well-being, people react to events but then return to baseline levels of happiness and satisfaction over time. We tested this idea by examining reaction and adaptation to unemployment in a 15-year longitudinal study of more than 24,000 individuals living in Germany. In accordance with set-point theories, individuals reacted strongly to unemployment and then shifted back toward their baseline levels of life satisfaction. However, on average, individuals did not completely return to their former levels of satisfaction, even after they became reemployed. Furthermore, contrary to expectations from adaptation theories, people who had experienced unemployment in the past did not react any less negatively to a new bout of unemployment than did people who had not been previously unemployed. These results suggest that although life satisfaction is moderately stable over time, life events can have a strong influence on long-term levels of subjective well-being.

1,132 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In contrast to recent sociological emphases on the social shaping of technology, this article argued for a recognition of the constraining, as well as enabling, materiality of artefacts, and illustrated a way of analysing the technological shaping of sociality.
Abstract: In contrast to recent sociological emphases on the social shaping of technology, this article proposes and illustrates a way of analysing the technological shaping of sociality. Drawing on the concept of affordances (Gibson 1979), the article argues for a recognition of the constraining, as well as enabling, materiality of artefacts. The argument is set in the theoretical context of one of the most recent and comprehensive statements of anti-essentialism (Grint and Woolgar 1997). The position is illustrated through a reinterpretation of some case studies used by proponents of the radical constructivist position.

1,103 citations


Authors

Showing all 11074 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yang Yang1712644153049
Hongfang Liu1662356156290
Gavin Davies1592036149835
Marjo-Riitta Järvelin156923100939
Matt J. Jarvis144106485559
Alexander Belyaev1421895100796
Louis Lyons138174798864
Silvano Tosi135171297559
John A Coughlan135131296578
Kenichi Hatakeyama1341731102438
Kristian Harder134161396571
Peter R Hobson133159094257
Christopher Seez132125689943
Liliana Teodorescu132147190106
Umesh Joshi131124990323
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202380
2022235
20211,532
20201,475
20191,445
20181,345