Institution
Dublin City University
Education•Dublin, Ireland•
About: Dublin City University is a education organization based out in Dublin, Ireland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Machine translation. The organization has 5904 authors who have published 17178 publications receiving 389376 citations. The organization is also known as: National Institute for Higher Education, Dublin & DCU.
Topics: Context (language use), Machine translation, Laser, Irish, Population
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The selection and application of cutting fluids in industry have not always been accomplished in an optimal manner as mentioned in this paper, however, when properly applied, cutting fluids can increase productivity and reduce costs by making possible the use of higher cutting speeds, higher feed rates and greater depths of cut.
189 citations
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Harvard University1, University of California, San Francisco2, Karolinska University Hospital3, Memorial Hospital of South Bend4, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill5, Aalborg University6, University of Cambridge7, Jagiellonian University Medical College8, Sahlgrenska University Hospital9, National University of Singapore10, Cross Cancer Institute11, Second Military Medical University12, University of Bologna13, Queen Mary University of London14, New York University15, Peking University16, Saint John Regional Hospital17, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital18, Dublin City University19, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens20, Roswell Park Cancer Institute21, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center22, University of Navarra23, University of Turin24, Mayo Clinic25, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center26
TL;DR: This comprehensive manuscript from the International Myeloma Working Group provides detailed recommendations on management of relapsed disease, with sections dedicated to diagnostic evaluation, determinants of therapy, and general approach to patients with specific disease characteristics.
Abstract: The prognosis for patients multiple myeloma (MM) has improved substantially over the past decade with the development of new, more effective chemotherapeutic agents and regimens that possess a high level of anti-tumor activity. In spite of this important progress, however, nearly all MM patients ultimately relapse, even those who experience a complete response to initial therapy. Management of relapsed MM thus represents a vital aspect of the overall care for patients with MM and a critical area of ongoing scientific and clinical research. This comprehensive manuscript from the International Myeloma Working Group provides detailed recommendations on management of relapsed disease, with sections dedicated to diagnostic evaluation, determinants of therapy, and general approach to patients with specific disease characteristics. In addition, the manuscript provides a summary of evidence from clinical trials that have significantly impacted the field, including those evaluating conventional dose therapies, as well as both autologous and allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Specific recommendations are offered for management of first and second relapse, relapsed and refractory disease, and both autologous and allogeneic transplant. Finally, perspective is provided regarding new agents and promising directions in management of relapsed MM.
189 citations
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University of Rhode Island1, Ocean Drilling Program2, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology3, Texas A&M University4, University of North Carolina at Wilmington5, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology6, University of Oldenburg7, Max Planck Society8, Aarhus University9, Oregon State University10, Minnesota State University, Mankato11, Hanyang University12, Yonsei University13, University of Melbourne14, Shizuoka University15, Boston University16, University of Tsukuba17, Hiroshima University18, National Oceanography Centre19, University of Bergen20, University of Tokyo21, Dublin City University22, IFREMER23, Chinese Academy of Sciences24, Ocean University of China25, University of Southern California26
TL;DR: The depth of oxygen penetration and microbial activity in marine sediments varies by region as mentioned in this paper, and the depth of microbial communities varies with the region of interest, and the microbial communities can be found up to 75 meters below the sea floor.
Abstract: The depth of oxygen penetration and microbial activity in marine sediments varies by region. Sediment cores from the South Pacific Gyre host oxygen and aerobic microbial communities to at least 75 metres below the sea floor.
189 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a grounded theory study was conducted in an Irish university exploring host (Irish) students' perspectives on intercultural contact, focusing on students' construction of cultural difference within the educational environment, the factors influencing interculture contact, and students' experiences of such contact.
Abstract: Given the increasing numbers of international students in Ireland and the lack of attention afforded to host culture students in existing research on intercultural relations in higher education, a grounded theory study was conducted in an Irish university exploring host (Irish) students' perspectives on intercultural contact. The study focused on students' construction of cultural difference within the educational environment, the factors influencing intercultural contact, and students' experiences of such contact. The findings suggest that although nationality and age are used to differentiate students, the concept of “maturity”—underpinned by values and behaviors relating to academic motivations, responsibilities, and authority—is central to students' construction of cultural difference on campus.Diverse factors identified as impacting upon students' intercultural acquaintance prospects and relational development are presented and discussed. The findings highlight the complexity of promoting meaningful ...
189 citations
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Dublin City University1, University College Dublin2, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart3, Leibniz Association4, Cork Institute of Technology5, Ghent University6, University of Limerick7, Sapienza University of Rome8, University of Cassino9, University of Chieti-Pescara10, University of Stuttgart11, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine12, University of Konstanz13, French Institute of Health and Medical Research14
TL;DR: Findings suggest that for adults, convincing evidence supports a relationship between PA and socioeconomic status (SES), especially in relation to leisure time (positive relationship) and occupational PA (negative relationship).
Abstract: Background
To date, the scientific literature on socioeconomic correlates and determinants of physical activity behaviours has been dispersed throughout a number of systematic reviews, often focusing on one factor (eg education or parental income) in one specific age group (eg pre-school children or adults) The aim of this umbrella review is to provide a comprehensive and systematic overview of the scientific literature from previously conducted research by summarising and synthesising the importance and strength of the evidence related to socioeconomic correlates and determinants of PA behaviours across the life course
Methods
Medline, Embase, ISI Web of Science, Scopus and SPORTDiscus were searched for systematic literature reviews and meta-analyses of observational studies investigating the association between socioeconomic determinants of PA and PA itself (from January 2004 to September 2017) Data extraction evaluated the importance of determinants, strength of evidence, and methodological quality of the selected papers The full protocol is available from PROSPERO (PROSPERO2014:CRD42015010616)
Results
Nineteen reviews were included Moderate methodological quality emerged For adults, convincing evidence supports a relationship between PA and socioeconomic status (SES), especially in relation to leisure time (positive relationship) and occupational PA (negative relationship) Conversely, no association between PA and SES or parental SES was found for pre-school, school-aged children and adolescents
Conclusions
Available evidence on the socioeconomic determinants of PA behaviour across the life course is probable (shows fairly consistent associations) at best While some evidence is available for adults, less was available for youth This is mainly due to a limited quantity of primary studies, weak research designs and lack of accuracy in the PA and SES assessment methods employed Further PA domain specific studies using longitudinal design and clear measures of SES and PA assessment are required
188 citations
Authors
Showing all 6059 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph Wang | 158 | 1282 | 98799 |
David Cameron | 154 | 1586 | 126067 |
David Taylor | 131 | 2469 | 93220 |
Gordon G. Wallace | 114 | 1267 | 69095 |
David A. Morrow | 113 | 598 | 56776 |
G. Hughes | 103 | 957 | 46632 |
David Wilson | 102 | 757 | 49388 |
Muhammad Imran | 94 | 3053 | 51728 |
Haibo Zeng | 94 | 604 | 39226 |
David Lloyd | 90 | 1017 | 37691 |
Vikas Kumar | 89 | 859 | 39185 |
Luke P. Lee | 84 | 413 | 22803 |
James Chapman | 82 | 483 | 36468 |
Muhammad Iqbal | 77 | 961 | 23821 |
Michael C. Berndt | 76 | 228 | 16897 |