Institution
Memorial University of Newfoundland
Education•St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada•
About: Memorial University of Newfoundland is a education organization based out in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gadus. The organization has 13818 authors who have published 27785 publications receiving 743594 citations. The organization is also known as: Memorial University & Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Topics: Population, Gadus, Health care, Poison control, Atlantic cod
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Several types of AC bearingless motors have been proposed in this article, which have conventional four-pole stator windings and additional two-pole windings, whose currents produce radial forces acting on the rotor.
Abstract: Several types of AC bearingless motors are proposed. These bearingless motors have conventional four-pole stator windings and additional two-pole windings, whose currents produce radial forces acting on the rotor. General expressions of the machine inductances and radial forces are derived for the cylindrical rotor and salient-pole motors. No-load characteristics of laboratory squirrel-cage induction and reluctance-type synchronous bearingless motors are provided. The test motors were successfully driven by the control circuits. >
184 citations
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TL;DR: A modification of the typical minimum-structure inver-sion algorithm is presented that generates blocky, piecewise-constant earth models that are often more consistent with the authors' real or perceived knowledge of the subsurface than the fuzzy, smeared-out models produced by current minimum-Structure inversions.
Abstract: A modification of the typical minimum-structure inver-sion algorithm is presented that generates blocky, piecewise-constant earth models. Such models are often more consistent with our real or perceived knowledge of the subsurface than the fuzzy, smeared-out models produced by current minimum-structure inversions. The modified algorithm uses l1 -type measures in the measure of model structure instead of the traditional sum-of-squares, or l2 , measure. An iteratively reweighted least-squares procedure is used to deal with the nonlinearity introduced by the non- l2 measure. Also, and of note here, diagonal finite differences are included in the measure of model structure. This enables dipping interfaces to be formed. The modified algorithm retains the benefits of the minimum-structure style of inversion — namely, reliability, robustness, and minimal artifacts in the constructed model. Two examples are given: the 2D inversion of synthetic magnetotelluric data and the 3D inversion of gravity data from the Ovo...
184 citations
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TL;DR: Although some women may experience fragility fractures as a consequence of pregnancy or lactation, for most women, parity and lactation do not affect the long-term risks of low bone density, osteoporosis, or fracture.
183 citations
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TL;DR: The fly-in/fly-out model has both beneficial and adverse implications for the sustainability of both existing communities near new resource developments and for the more distant communities from which workers are drawn.
Abstract: “Fly-in/fly-out” is a form of work organization that has become the standard model for new mining, petroleum and other types of resource development in remote areas. In many places this “no town” model has replaced that of the “new town.” The work system has both beneficial and adverse implications for the sustainability of both existing communities near new resource developments and for the more distant communities from which workers are drawn. This paper explores these outcomes drawing upon examples from North America and Australia.
183 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that increased zinc intake in early infancy may be beneficial to very low birthweight infants, especially for infants under 1,500 g. But, the results were limited to verylow birthweight (VLBW) infants.
Abstract: Inadequate zinc intake may lead to poor growth and developmental outcome in very-low-birth-weight (VLBW; < 1,500 g) infants. Fifty-two infants (mean birth weight, 1,117 +/- 287 g; mean gestational age, 29 +/- 2.9 weeks) were randomly allocated to two groups. SUPP infants received a regular term formula plus zinc supplements (4.4 mg/L; final content, 11 mg/L); PLAC infants received the same formula plus placebo (final content, 6.7 mg/L). Infants started their formula at 1,853 +/- 109 g and consumed the formula for 6 months. All subjects were evaluated at 3, 6, 9, and 12 +/- 0.75 months corrected-for-gestational-age. At each evaluation, weight, length, and head circumference were measured, a Griffiths developmental assessment was performed, and a blood sample was taken. Higher plasma zinc levels (p < 0.05) were found in the SUPP group at 1 and 3 months, and improved linear growth velocity was found in the SUPP group over the study period for the whole group as well as for girls alone. Maximum motor development scores were higher (p = 0.018) in the SUPP (98 +/- 10) than the PLAC (90 +/- 8) group, indicating that increased zinc intake in early infancy may be beneficial to VLBW infants.
183 citations
Authors
Showing all 13990 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Daniel Levy | 212 | 933 | 194778 |
Rakesh K. Jain | 200 | 1467 | 177727 |
Peter W.F. Wilson | 181 | 680 | 139852 |
Martin G. Larson | 171 | 620 | 117708 |
Peter B. Jones | 145 | 1857 | 94641 |
Dafna D. Gladman | 129 | 1036 | 75273 |
Guoyao Wu | 122 | 764 | 56270 |
Fereidoon Shahidi | 119 | 951 | 57796 |
David Harvey | 115 | 738 | 94678 |
Robert C. Haddon | 112 | 577 | 52712 |
Se-Kwon Kim | 102 | 763 | 39344 |
John E. Dowling | 94 | 305 | 28116 |
Mark J. Sarnak | 94 | 393 | 42485 |
William T. Greenough | 93 | 200 | 29230 |
Soottawat Benjakul | 92 | 891 | 34336 |