Institution
Flinders University
Education•Adelaide, South Australia, Australia•
About: Flinders University is a education organization based out in Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 12033 authors who have published 32831 publications receiving 973172 citations. The organization is also known as: Flinders University of South Australia.
Topics: Population, Health care, Poison control, Palliative care, Mental health
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This article surveys the approaches and algorithms proposed to date in Sequential Pattern Mining, a subfield of data mining to focus on detecting and analyzing frequent subsequences in data.
Abstract: Sequences of events, items, or tokens occurring in an ordered metric space appear often in data and the requirement to detect and analyze frequent subsequences is a common problem Sequential Pattern Mining arose as a subfield of data mining to focus on this field This article surveys the approaches and algorithms proposed to date
295 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship between three dimensions of children's peer relations, namely the tendency to be victimized, to bully and to be prosocial and depression, and found a significant association between depression and bullying.
295 citations
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TL;DR: A computerized version of the Corsi blocks task was assessed for standard forward-Recall order and for reversed-recall order either in a single-task or in a dual-task design combined with articulatory suppression, matrix-tapping, random-interval generation or fixed-Interval generation as concurrent tasks during the encoding stage.
Abstract: A computerized version of the Corsi blocks task (Milner, 1971) was assessed for standard forward-recall order (Experiments 1 and 3) and for reversed-recall order (Experiments 2 and 3) either in a single-task or in a dual-task design combined with articulatory suppression, matrix-tapping, random-interval generation or fixed-interval generation as concurrent tasks during the encoding stage. Concurrent performance of the matrix-tapping task impaired memory performance for short as well as for longer block sequences. The random-interval generation task, which loads executive processes, impaired memory performance mainly at intermediate- and longer-sequence lengths, while fixed-interval generation, which is presumed to put no load on executive processing, did not show any effect. Articulatory suppression did not impair memory performance on forward-recall order, but it impaired memory for longer sequences in the backward-recall condition in Experimentt 2, but not in Experiment 3. The results are discussed within the context of the working-memory model of Baddeley and Hitch (1974).
295 citations
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294 citations
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TL;DR: Physical attributes of the home environment and parental behaviours are associated with preschool children's physical activity, sedentary behaviour and dietary patterns and many of these variables are modifiable and could be targeted in childhood obesity prevention and management.
Abstract: To assess relationships between characteristics of the home environment and preschool children's physical activity and dietary patterns. Homes of 280 preschool children were visited and information obtained by direct observation and parent interview regarding physical and nutritional characteristics of the home environment. Children's physical activity, sedentary behaviour and dietary patterns were measured using standardised parent-report questionnaires. Associations were analysed using analysis of variance and correlation. Parental physical activity (p = 0.03–0.008), size of backyard (p = 0.001) and amount of outdoor play equipment (p = 0.003) were associated with more outdoor play. Fewer rules about television viewing (p < 0.001) and presence of playstation (p = 0.02) were associated with more indoor sedentary time. Higher fruit and vegetable intake was associated with restricting children's access to fruit juice (p = 0.02) and restricting high fat/sugar snacks (p = 0.009). Lower intake of non-core foods was associated with restricting children's access to fruit juice (p = 0.007), cordial/carbonated drinks (p < 0.001) and high fat/sugar snacks (p = 0.003). Lower fruit and vegetable intake was associated with reminding child to 'eat up' (p = 0.007) and offering food rewards to eat main meal (p = 0.04). Higher intake of non-core foods was associated with giving food 'treats' (p = 0.03) and offering food rewards to eat main meal (p = 0.04). The availability of food groups in the home was associated with children's intake of these foods (fruit and vegetables, p < 0.001; fat in dairy, p = <0.001; sweetened beverages, p = 0.004–<0.001; non-core foods, p = 0.01–<0.001). Physical attributes of the home environment and parental behaviours are associated with preschool children's physical activity, sedentary behaviour and dietary patterns. Many of these variables are modifiable and could be targeted in childhood obesity prevention and management.
294 citations
Authors
Showing all 12221 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Matthew Jones | 125 | 1161 | 96909 |
Robert Edwards | 121 | 775 | 74552 |
Justin C. McArthur | 113 | 433 | 47346 |
Peter Somogyi | 112 | 232 | 42450 |
Glenda M. Halliday | 111 | 676 | 53684 |
Jonathan C. Craig | 108 | 872 | 59401 |
Bruce Neal | 108 | 561 | 87213 |
Alan Cooper | 108 | 746 | 45772 |
Robert J. Norman | 103 | 755 | 45147 |
John B. Furness | 103 | 597 | 37668 |
Richard J. Miller | 103 | 419 | 35669 |
Michael J. Brownstein | 102 | 274 | 47929 |
Craig S. Anderson | 101 | 650 | 49331 |
John Chalmers | 99 | 831 | 55005 |
Kevin D. Hyde | 99 | 1382 | 46113 |