Institution
La Trobe University
Education•Melbourne, Victoria, Australia•
About: La Trobe University is a education organization based out in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 13370 authors who have published 41291 publications receiving 1138269 citations. The organization is also known as: LaTrobe University & LTU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The authors examined the demographic profiles of Australian green consumers in relation to their satisfaction of environmental labelling and empirically investigated the association of demographic profile of consumers with their attitudes towards such labels.
Abstract: This research examined the demographic profiles of Australian green consumers in relation to their satisfaction of environmental labelling. It examined consumers’ understanding of labelling and empirically investigated the association of demographic profile of consumers with their attitudes towards such labels. The results indicated that some of the demographic variables were significant, which is largely consistent with earlier findings by other researchers in this area. Label dissatisfaction was higher in the older and middle age respondents. However, some respondents disagreed that labels were accurate while commenting that labels were easy to understand. The key issue arising from the findings is that in order to provide perception of accuracy in labels, it is an option to use Type I or Type III labelling on products. These labels are, arguably, more credible because they are endorsed by third party labelling experts. This would come at a cost and for green products that use third party labelling, they will also have to bear in mind to keep the prices competitive.
420 citations
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Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre1, St. Vincent's Health System2, Washington University in St. Louis3, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital4, Royal Adelaide Hospital5, University of Western Australia6, University of Newcastle7, La Trobe University8, Fiona Stanley Hospital9, Royal North Shore Hospital10, Liverpool Hospital11, University of Sydney12, Monash University13
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared Lutetium-177 [177Lu]Lu-PSMA-617 with cabazitaxel in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.
418 citations
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TL;DR: A research agenda is defined to maximise the rate of learning in this difficult field of fire management, including measuring responses at a species level, building capacity to implement natural experiments, undertaking simulation modelling, and judicious application of experimental approaches.
417 citations
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TL;DR: Psychological responses before surgery and in early recovery were associated with returning to preinjury level of sport at 12 months, suggesting that attention to psychological recovery in addition to physical recovery after ACL injury and reconstruction surgery may be warranted.
Abstract: Background:Up to two-thirds of athletes may not return to their preinjury level of sport by 12 months after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction surgery, despite being physically recovered. This has led to questions about what other factors may influence return to sport.Purpose:To determine whether psychological factors predicted return to preinjury level of sport by 12 months after ACL reconstruction surgery.Study Design:Case control study; Level of evidence, 3.Methods:Recreational and competitive-level athletes seen at a private orthopaedic clinic with an ACL injury were consecutively recruited. The primary outcome was return to the preinjury level of sports participation. The psychological factors evaluated were psychological readiness to return to sport, fear of reinjury, mood, emotions, sport locus of control, and recovery expectations. Participants were followed up preoperatively and at 4 and 12 months postoperatively.Results:In total, 187 athletes participated. At 12 months, 56 athletes ...
416 citations
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TL;DR: This paper describes how plants adjust their root architecture to low-P conditions through inhibition of primary root growth, promotion of lateralroot growth, enhancement of root hair development and cluster root formation, which all promote P acquisition by plants.
416 citations
Authors
Showing all 13601 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rasmus Nielsen | 135 | 556 | 84898 |
C. N. R. Rao | 133 | 1646 | 86718 |
James Whelan | 128 | 786 | 89180 |
Jacqueline Batley | 119 | 1212 | 68752 |
Eske Willerslev | 115 | 367 | 43039 |
Jonathan E. Shaw | 114 | 629 | 108114 |
Ary A. Hoffmann | 113 | 907 | 55354 |
Mike Clarke | 113 | 1037 | 164328 |
Richard J. Simpson | 113 | 850 | 59378 |
Alan F. Cowman | 111 | 379 | 38240 |
David C. Page | 110 | 509 | 44119 |
Richard Gray | 109 | 808 | 78580 |
David S. Wishart | 108 | 523 | 76652 |
Alan G. Marshall | 107 | 1060 | 46904 |
David A. Williams | 106 | 633 | 42058 |