Institution
Deakin University
Education•Burwood, Victoria, Australia•
About: Deakin University is a education organization based out in Burwood, Victoria, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 12118 authors who have published 46470 publications receiving 1188841 citations. The organization is also known as: Deakin.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation1, Deakin University2, South China Agricultural University3, College of Horticulture4, University of South Australia5, University of Adelaide6, Arizona State University7, Beijing Normal University8, Chinese Academy of Sciences9, Inner Mongolia University10, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University11
TL;DR: It is overwhelmingly that the interventions improved the sustainability of China’s rural land systems, but the impacts are nuanced and adverse outcomes have occurred.
Abstract: China has responded to a national land-system sustainability emergency via an integrated portfolio of large-scale programmes. Here we review 16 sustainability programmes, which invested US$378.5 billion (in 2015 US$), covered 623.9 million hectares of land and involved over 500 million people, mostly since 1998. We find overwhelmingly that the interventions improved the sustainability of China’s rural land systems, but the impacts are nuanced and adverse outcomes have occurred. We identify some key characteristics of programme success, potential risks to their durability, and future research needs. We suggest directions for China and other nations as they progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations’ Agenda 2030.
702 citations
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TL;DR: 1 year of adjuvant trastuzumab after chemotherapy for patients with HER2-positive early breast cancer significantly improves long-term disease-free survival, compared with observation.
701 citations
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University of Sydney1, RMIT University2, University of Melbourne3, Hull York Medical School4, University of Barcelona5, Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies6, Carlos III Health Institute7, University of Queensland8, University of New South Wales9, University of Adelaide10, University of Glasgow11, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile12, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health13, University of Toronto14, Deakin University15, Hofstra University16, Charité17, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust18, King's College London19, University of Manchester20, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre21, University of Salford22, University College London23, Dalhousie University24, Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli25, Universidade Federal de Santa Maria26, Anglia Ruskin University27, University of Padua28, Park Centre for Mental Health29, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center30, The George Institute for Global Health31, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven32, National Research Council33
TL;DR: This Commission summarises advances in understanding on the topic of physical health in people with mental illness, and presents clear directions for health promotion, clinical care, and future research.
696 citations
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TL;DR: A global metaanalysis of the impacts of invasive mammalian predators on biodiversity reveals cats, rodents, dogs, and pigs have the most pervasive impacts, and endemic island faunas are most vulnerable to invasive predators.
Abstract: Invasive species threaten biodiversity globally, and invasive mammalian predators are particularly damaging, having contributed to considerable species decline and extinction. We provide a global metaanalysis of these impacts and reveal their full extent. Invasive predators are implicated in 87 bird, 45 mammal, and 10 reptile species extinctions—58% of these groups’ contemporary extinctions worldwide. These figures are likely underestimated because 23 critically endangered species that we assessed are classed as “possibly extinct.” Invasive mammalian predators endanger a further 596 species at risk of extinction, with cats, rodents, dogs, and pigs threatening the most species overall. Species most at risk from predators have high evolutionary distinctiveness and inhabit insular environments. Invasive mammalian predators are therefore important drivers of irreversible loss of phylogenetic diversity worldwide. That most impacted species are insular indicates that management of invasive predators on islands should be a global conservation priority. Understanding and mitigating the impact of invasive mammalian predators is essential for reducing the rate of global biodiversity loss.
694 citations
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TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between capital formation, energy consumption and real GDP in a panel of G7 countries using panel unit root, panel cointegration, Granger causality and long-run structural estimation.
694 citations
Authors
Showing all 12448 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Patrick D. McGorry | 137 | 1097 | 72092 |
Mary Story | 135 | 522 | 64623 |
Dacheng Tao | 133 | 1362 | 68263 |
Paul Harrison | 133 | 1400 | 80539 |
Paul Zimmet | 128 | 740 | 140376 |
Neville Owen | 127 | 700 | 74166 |
Louisa Degenhardt | 126 | 798 | 139683 |
David Scott | 124 | 1561 | 82554 |
Anthony F. Jorm | 124 | 798 | 67120 |
Tao Zhang | 123 | 2772 | 83866 |
John C. Wingfield | 122 | 509 | 52291 |
John J. McGrath | 120 | 791 | 124804 |
Eduard Vieta | 119 | 1248 | 57755 |
Michael Berk | 116 | 1284 | 57743 |
Ashley I. Bush | 116 | 560 | 57009 |