Institution
Curtin University
Education•Perth, Western Australia, Australia•
About: Curtin University is a education organization based out in Perth, Western Australia, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Zircon. The organization has 14257 authors who have published 48997 publications receiving 1336531 citations. The organization is also known as: WAIT & Western Australian Institute of Technology.
Topics: Population, Zircon, Poison control, Context (language use), Health care
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, two temporally discrete episodes of granite magmatism have been identified in the Wutai Complex of the North China Craton, based on SHRIMP U-Pb zircon dating of all major granitoid bodies in the area.
290 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used LA-ICPMS zircon U-Pb dating of three plutons from eastern Hebei, eastern North China Craton, record emplacement ages of 2526-2515-Ma and metamorphic ages of 2500-2490-Ma for the diorite, granodiorite and monzogranite and 2440-1.0-Ga for the K-feldspar granite.
290 citations
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TL;DR: A meta-analysis of 54 published studies tested the extent to which a systematic misclassification error was committed by including as ‘abstainers’ many people who had reduced or stopped drinking, a phenomenon associated with ageing and ill health.
Abstract: The majority of prospective studies on alcohol use and mortality risk indicates that abstainers are at increased risk of mortality from both all causes and coronary heart disease (CHD). This meta-a...
290 citations
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University of Manchester1, Arecibo Observatory2, Lafayette College3, National Radio Astronomy Observatory4, United States Naval Research Laboratory5, Swinburne University of Technology6, Goddard Space Flight Center7, West Virginia University8, ASTRON9, Curtin University10, Cornell University11, INAF12, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research13, Peking University14, Max Planck Society15, PSL Research University16, University of Orléans17, University of British Columbia18, Australia Telescope National Facility19, Paris Diderot University20, Hillsdale College21, University of East Anglia22, University of Maryland, College Park23, McGill University24, University of Birmingham25, University of Washington26, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee27, Radboud University Nijmegen28, University of Toronto29, York University30, Hungarian Academy of Sciences31, University of Cagliari32, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation33, University of Milan34, Oregon State University35, California Institute of Technology36, Vanderbilt University37, Chinese Academy of Sciences38, Monash University, Clayton campus39
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the International Pulsar Timing Array second data release, which includes recent pulsar timing data obtained by three regional consortia: the European Pulsars Timing array, the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves, and the Parkes pulsar timing array, and find that the timing precisions of pulsars are generally improved compared to the previous data release.
Abstract: In this paper, we describe the International Pulsar Timing Array second data release, which includes recent pulsar timing data obtained by three regional consortia: the European Pulsar Timing Array, the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves, and the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array. We analyse and where possible combine high-precision timing data for 65 millisecond pulsars which are regularly observed by these groups. A basic noise analysis, including the processes which are both correlated and uncorrelated in time, provides noise models and timing ephemerides for the pulsars. We find that the timing precisions of pulsars are generally improved compared to the previous data release, mainly due to the addition of new data in the combination. The main purpose of this work is to create the most up-to-date IPTA data release. These data are publicly available for searches for low-frequency gravitational waves and other pulsar science.
289 citations
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TL;DR: In conclusion, SDT-informed interventions positively affect indices of health; these effects are modest, heterogeneous, and partly due to increases in self-determined motivation and support from social agents.
Abstract: There are no literature reviews that have examined the impact of health-domain interventions, informed by self-determination theory (SDT), on SDT constructs and health indices. Our aim was to meta-analyse such interventions in the health promotion and disease management literatures. Studies were eligible if they used an experimental design, tested an intervention that was based on SDT, measured at least one SDT-based motivational construct, and at least one indicator of health behaviour, physical health, or psychological health. Seventy-three studies met these criteria and provided sufficient data for the purposes of the review. A random-effects meta-analytic model showed that SDT-based interventions produced small-to-medium changes in most SDT constructs at the end of the intervention period, and in health behaviours at the end of the intervention period and at the follow-up. Small positive changes in physical and psychological health outcomes were also observed at the end of the interventions. Increases in need support and autonomous motivation (but not controlled motivation or amotivation) were associated with positive changes in health behaviour. In conclusion, SDT-informed interventions positively affect indices of health; these effects are modest, heterogeneous, and partly due to increases in self-determined motivation and support from social agents.
289 citations
Authors
Showing all 14504 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David Smith | 129 | 2184 | 100917 |
Christopher G. Maher | 128 | 940 | 73131 |
Mike Wright | 127 | 775 | 64030 |
Shaobin Wang | 126 | 872 | 52463 |
Mietek Jaroniec | 123 | 571 | 79561 |
John B. Holcomb | 120 | 733 | 53760 |
Simon A. Wilde | 118 | 390 | 45547 |
Jian Liu | 117 | 2090 | 73156 |
Meilin Liu | 117 | 827 | 52603 |
Guochun Zhao | 113 | 406 | 40886 |
Mark W. Chase | 111 | 519 | 50783 |
Robert U. Newton | 109 | 753 | 42527 |
Simon P. Driver | 109 | 455 | 46299 |
Peter R. Schofield | 109 | 693 | 50892 |
Gao Qing Lu | 108 | 546 | 53914 |