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Cooperative Research Centre

About: Cooperative Research Centre is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Sea ice. The organization has 7633 authors who have published 8607 publications receiving 429721 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data underlying Nal-NL2 and the derivation procedure are presented, and the main differences from NAL-NL1 are outlined.
Abstract: NAL-NL2 is the second generation of prescription procedures from The National Acoustic Laboratories (NAL) for fitting wide dynamic range compression (WDRC) instruments. Like its predecessor NALNL1 (Dillon, 1999), NAL-NL2 aims at making speech intelligible and overall loudness comfortable. This aim is mainly driven by a belief that these factors are most important for hearing aid users, but is also driven by the fact that less information is available about how to adjust gain to optimise other parameters that affect prescription such as localisation, tonal quality, detection of environmental sounds, and naturalness. In both formulas, the objective is achieved by combining a speech intelligibility model and a loudness model in an adaptive computer- controlled optimisation process. Adjustments have further been made to the theoretical component of NAL-NL2 that are directed by empirical data collected during the past decade with NAL-NL1. In this paper, the data underlying NAL-NL2 and the derivation procedure are presented, and the main differences from NAL-NL1 are outlined.

328 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Tasman Sea off southeast Australia exhibited its longest and most intense marine heatwave ever recorded in 2015/16, with observed characteristics, physical drivers, ecological impacts and the role of climate change reported.
Abstract: The Tasman Sea off southeast Australia exhibited its longest and most intense marine heatwave ever recorded in 2015/16. Here we report on several inter-related aspects of this event: observed characteristics, physical drivers, ecological impacts and the role of climate change. This marine heatwave lasted for 251 days reaching a maximum intensity of 2.9 °C above climatology. The anomalous warming is dominated by anomalous convergence of heat linked to the southward flowing East Australian Current. Ecosystem impacts range from new disease outbreaks in farmed shellfish, mortality of wild molluscs and out-of-range species observations. Global climate models indicate it is very likely to be that the occurrence of an extreme warming event of this duration or intensity in this region is respectively ≥330 times and ≥6.8 times as likely to be due to the influence of anthropogenic climate change. Climate projections indicate that event likelihoods will increase in the future, due to increasing anthropogenic influences.

327 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ants are sensitive to SO2 emissions and appear to be good candidates as an indicator group in this context, however, an alternative functional group framework is required for the identification of recurrent responses of arid zone ant communities to disturbance.
Abstract: The impact of dry deposition of SO2 emissions on ant abundance, diversity and composition was investigated at Mount Isa in the semiarid tropics of northern Australia. Forty plots were sampled, stratified at two levels: sulfur deposition zones (high, medium, low, and two control zones) and habitat (Ridge and Plain). The two habitats supported distinctly different ant communities. Ants had clear responses to SO2 emissions. Ant abundance was lowest in the high and medium sulfur zones in both habitats. Species richness in high SO2 plots (up to 5 km from the source) was approximately half that of control plots in Ridge habitat, and was substantially less than controls in the Plain habitat. Ant community composition in the high sulfur zone was clearly separated from those of other zones in ordinations. Vector fitting showed soil SO4 concentration as a primary correlative factor in this separation. Ant abundance and richness were both negatively correlated with soil SO4 concentration, and positively correlated with plant species richness and distance away from the smelters. The abundance of 10 of the 21 most common species showed significant responses to emissions. Five species showed positive responses, and all belong to species-groups known to be abundant at disturbed sites throughout northern Australia. Relative abundance and richness of Eyrean (arid adapted) taxa collectively responded positively to sulfur, and Torresian (tropical) and Widespread species responded negatively. Despite large changes in species composition and abundances, there was relatively little change in the abundance of functional groups that have been widely used in studies of Australian ant communities. Ants are sensitive to SO2 emissions and appear to be good candidates as an indicator group in this context. However, an alternative functional group framework is required for the identification of recurrent responses of arid zone ant communities to disturbance.

327 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A tomographic imaging modality that uses pulsed terahertz (THz) radiation to probe the optical properties of three-dimensional structures in the far-infrared, analogous to conventional CT techniques such as x-ray CT.
Abstract: We demonstrate a tomographic imaging modality that uses pulsed terahertz (THz) radiation to probe the optical properties of three-dimensional (3D) structures in the far-infrared. This THz-wave computed tomography (T-ray CT) system provides sectional images of objects in a manner analogous to conventional CT techniques such as x-ray CT. The transmitted amplitude and phase of broadband pulses of THz radiation are measured at multiple projection angles. The filtered backprojection algorithm is then used to reconstruct the target object, including both its 3D structure and its frequency-dependent far-infrared optical properties.

322 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the taste and mouth-feel properties of three different types of tannin-like polyphenolic compounds, representative of some of the TPC compounds found in red wines, were determined using descriptive sensory analysis.

320 citations


Authors

Showing all 7633 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eric N. Olson206814144586
Nicholas G. Martin1921770161952
Grant W. Montgomery157926108118
Paul Mitchell146137895659
James Whelan12878689180
Shaobin Wang12687252463
Graham D. Farquhar12436875181
Jie Jin Wang12071954587
Christos Pantelis12072356374
John J. McGrath120791124804
David B. Lindenmayer11995459129
Ashley I. Bush11656057009
Yong-Guan Zhu11568446973
Ary A. Hoffmann11390755354
David A. Hume11357359932
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202211
2021243
2020284
2019300
2018327
2017419