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Institution

Griffith University

EducationBrisbane, 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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis was performed to quantify the association between antisocial behavior (ASB) and performance on neuropsychological executive functioning (EF) measures, which indicated that a robust association exists between ASB and poor EF that held across studies with varied methodological approaches.
Abstract: A meta-analysis was performed to quantify the association between antisocial behavior (ASB) and performance on neuropsychological executive functioning (EF) measures. This meta-analysis built on Morgan and Lilienfeld's (2000) meta-analysis of the same topic by including recently published studies and by examining a wider range of EF measures. A total of 126 studies involving 14,786 participants were included in the analyses. Antisocial groups performed significantly worse on measures of EF compared with controls, with a grand mean effect size of d= .44. Significant variation occurred in the magnitude of effect sizes calculated across studies. The largest effect sizes were found for criminality (d= .61) and externalizing behavior disorder (d= .54) ASB groups, whereas the smallest effect sizes were found for antisocial personality disorder (d= .19) groups. Larger differences in EF performance were observed across studies involving participants from correctional settings and with comorbid attention deficit and hyperactivity problems. Overall, the results indicated that a robust association exists between ASB and poor EF that held across studies with varied methodological approaches. The methodological issues in the research literature and the implications of the meta-analysis results are discussed, and the directions for future research are proposed.

353 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an example of the development of two Australian destinations, illustrating how entrepreneurs took advantage of chaos and turbulence, and applied their creativity in a manner that gave one destination a competitive advantage over the other.

353 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Carl Cater1
TL;DR: The most successful adventure tourism operators are those that have reduced their actual risk levels whilst effectively commodifying the thrills within this article, thus the responsibility of the commercial operator to minimise the opportunity for loss to as low a level as possible is not only an ethical one, but also ensures long-term business sustainability.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study develops and empirically tests a theoretical model of artificially intelligent device use acceptance (AIDUA) that aims to explain customers’ willingness to accept AI device use in service encounters, and provides a conceptual AI device acceptance framework that can be used by other researchers to better investigate AI related topics in the service context.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Defensive and offensive drills during basketball practice have similar physiological responses and physical demand and live play is substantially more demanding than a 5on5 scrimmage in both physical and physiological attributes.
Abstract: Purpose: To characterize the physical and physiological responses during different basketball practice drills and games. Methods: Male basketball players (n = 11; 19.1 ± 2.1 y, 1.91 ± 0.09 m, 87.9 ± 15.1 kg; mean ± SD) completed offensive and defensive practice drills, half court 5on5 scrimmage play, and competitive games. Heart rate, VO2 and triaxial accelerometer data (physical demand) were normalized for individual participation time. Data were log-transformed and differences between drills and games standardized for interpretation of magnitudes and reported with the effect size (ES) statistic. Results: There was no substantial difference in the physical or physiological variables between offensive and defensive drills; physical load (9.5%; 90% confidence limits ±45); mean heart rate (-2.4%; ±4.2); peak heart rate (-0.9%; ±3.4); and VO2 (–5.7%; ±9.1). Physical load was moderately greater in game play compared with a 5on5 scrimmage (85.2%; ±40.5); with a higher mean heart rate (12.4%; ±5.4). The oxygen ...

351 citations


Authors

Showing all 14162 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Rasmus Nielsen13555684898
Claudiu T. Supuran134197386850
Jeffrey D. Sachs13069286589
David Smith1292184100917
Michael R. Green12653757447
John J. McGrath120791124804
E. K. U. Gross119115475970
David M. Evans11663274420
Mike Clarke1131037164328
Wayne Hall111126075606
Patrick J. McGrath10768151940
Peter K. Smith10785549174
Erko Stackebrandt10663368201
Phyllis Butow10273137752
John Quackenbush9942767029
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023162
2022572
20214,086
20203,879
20193,573
20183,318