Institution
Griffith University
Education•Brisbane, Queensland, Australia•
About: Griffith University is a education organization based out in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 13830 authors who have published 49318 publications receiving 1420865 citations.
Topics: Population, Context (language use), Poison control, Health care, Tourism
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Monash University1, Laval University2, University of Warwick3, Griffith University4, University of Ottawa5, American Physical Therapy Association6, University of the West of England7, Radboud University Nijmegen8, University of British Columbia9, University of Sydney10, Okanagan College11, Bond University12, University of Otago13, University of South Australia14, La Trobe University15, University of Southern Denmark16, West Virginia University17, The George Institute for Global Health18, EHESP19, VU University Medical Center20, University of Edinburgh21, Utrecht University22, VU University Amsterdam23, University of Oxford24, King's College London25
TL;DR: The CERT, a 16-item checklist developed by an international panel of exercise experts, is designed to improve the reporting of exercise programs in all evaluative study designs and contains 7 categories: materials, provider, delivery, location, dosage, tailoring, and compliance.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Exercise interventions are often incompletely described in reports of clinical trials, hampering evaluation of results and replication and implementation into practice. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to develop a standardized method for reporting exercise programs in clinical trials: the Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template (CERT). DESIGN AND METHODS: Using the EQUATOR Network's methodological framework, 137 exercise experts were invited to participate in a Delphi consensus study. A list of 41 items was identified from a meta-epidemiologic study of 73 systematic reviews of exercise. For each item, participants indicated agreement on an 11-point rating scale. Consensus for item inclusion was defined a priori as greater than 70% agreement of respondents rating an item 7 or above. Three sequential rounds of anonymous online questionnaires and a Delphi workshop were used. RESULTS: There were 57 (response rate=42%), 54 (response rate=95%), and 49 (response rate=91%) respondents to rounds 1 through 3, respectively, from 11 countries and a range of disciplines. In round 1, 2 items were excluded; 24 items reached consensus for inclusion (8 items accepted in original format), and 16 items were revised in response to participant suggestions. Of 14 items in round 2, 3 were excluded, 11 reached consensus for inclusion (4 items accepted in original format), and 7 were reworded. Sixteen items were included in round 3, and all items reached greater than 70% consensus for inclusion. LIMITATIONS: The views of included Delphi panelists may differ from those of experts who declined participation and may not fully represent the views of all exercise experts. CONCLUSIONS: The CERT, a 16-item checklist developed by an international panel of exercise experts, is designed to improve the reporting of exercise programs in all evaluative study designs and contains 7 categories: materials, provider, delivery, location, dosage, tailoring, and compliance. The CERT will encourage transparency, improve trial interpretation and replication, and facilitate implementation of effective exercise interventions into practice.
243 citations
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TL;DR: A 25-year bibliometric analysis was conducted for the four highest ranked journals in the tourism field to explore trends and patterns in sustainable tourism research over the past 25 years as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: In the quarter of a century since the release of the 1987 Brundtland Report, sustainable tourism has emerged as the dominant paradigm in tourism development. However, the debate, discourse, and criticism of this subfield of tourism research continues. To address such concerns the purpose of this paper is to explore trends and patterns in sustainable tourism research over the past 25 years. A 25-year bibliometric analysis was conducted for the four highest ranked journals in the tourism field. Results indicate that the growth in sustainable tourism research has been remarkable, with 492 papers published in these four journals and almost half of these in the last two years of the analysis. The largest proportion of papers published on sustainable tourism was case studies, empirical studies, and critical reviews. This study found that while the theoretical and methodological approaches appear to have matured over time, the subjects and themes in sustainable tourism research, with some exceptions, have remained constant. However, the field is clearly maturing with a move away from definitional and conceptual papers to papers focused on testing and applying theory through empirical research.
242 citations
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University of Western Australia1, Spanish National Research Council2, Griffith University3, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton4, Western Washington University5, Hiroshima University6, University of British Columbia7, Yale University8, California Institute of Technology9, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution10, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center11, University of Southern Mississippi12
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that the proliferation of artificial structures, associated with the exponential growth in shipping, aquaculture, and other coastal industries, and coastal protection, provides habitat for jellyfish polyps and may be an important driver of the global increase in jellyfish blooms.
Abstract: Jellyfish (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa) blooms appear to be increasing in both intensity and frequency in many coastal areas worldwide, due to multiple hypothesized anthropogenic stressors. Here, we propose that the proliferation of artificial structures – associated with (1) the exponential growth in shipping, aquaculture, and other coastal industries, and (2) coastal protection (collectively, “ocean sprawl”) – provides habitat for jellyfish polyps and may be an important driver of the global increase in jellyfish blooms. However, the habitat of the benthic polyps that commonly result in coastal jellyfish blooms has remained elusive, limiting our understanding of the drivers of these blooms. Support for the hypothesized role of ocean sprawl in promoting jellyfish blooms is provided by observations and experimental evidence demonstrating that jellyfish larvae settle in large numbers on artificial structures in coastal waters and develop into dense concentrations of jellyfish-producing polyps.
242 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the state-of-the-art defect engineering strategies for designing highly efficient electrochemical nanocatalysts with special emphasis on the correlation between defect structures and electrocatalytic properties.
242 citations
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TL;DR: In the North American continent, in Europe and elsewhere, the dramatic growth in private security in the past several decades has reshaped the structure and function of modern policing and raised fundamental questions with respect to sovereignty, justice, and individual liberty now almost entirely unrecognised as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: On the North American continent, in Europe and elsewhere, the dramatic growth in private security in the past several decades has reshaped the structure and function of modern policing. The development of private security has been facilitated by fundamental shifts in the nature of property relations. These changes have encouraged the development of a preventative mode of policing consistent with the principles and hopes of nineteenth-century police reformers, but they also suggest that we are moving in the direction of a new disciplinary society and raise fundamental questions with respect to sovereignty, justice, and individual liberty now almost entirely unrecognised. In particular, the legal institutions regarding private property operate to enhance the potential threat to individual liberty posed by the development of modern private security.
242 citations
Authors
Showing all 14162 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rasmus Nielsen | 135 | 556 | 84898 |
Claudiu T. Supuran | 134 | 1973 | 86850 |
Jeffrey D. Sachs | 130 | 692 | 86589 |
David Smith | 129 | 2184 | 100917 |
Michael R. Green | 126 | 537 | 57447 |
John J. McGrath | 120 | 791 | 124804 |
E. K. U. Gross | 119 | 1154 | 75970 |
David M. Evans | 116 | 632 | 74420 |
Mike Clarke | 113 | 1037 | 164328 |
Wayne Hall | 111 | 1260 | 75606 |
Patrick J. McGrath | 107 | 681 | 51940 |
Peter K. Smith | 107 | 855 | 49174 |
Erko Stackebrandt | 106 | 633 | 68201 |
Phyllis Butow | 102 | 731 | 37752 |
John Quackenbush | 99 | 427 | 67029 |