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Institution

Memorial University of Newfoundland

EducationSt. 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.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review summarizes the current knowledge on the impact of heat-moisture treatment on the composition, granule morphology, crystallinity, X-ray pattern, granular swelling, amylose leaching, pasting properties, gelatinization and retrogradation parameters, and susceptibility towards α-amylase and acid hydrolysis.
Abstract: Heat-moisture treatment is a hydrothermal treatment that changes the physicochemical properties of starches by facilitating starch chain interactions within the amorphous and crystalline domains and/or by disrupting starch crystallites. The extent of these changes is influenced by starch composition, moisture content and temperature during treatment, and by the organization of amylose and amylopectin chains within native starch granules. During heat-moisture treatment starch granules at low moisture levels [(<35% water (w/w)] are heated at a temperature above the glass transition temperature (T(g)) but below the gelatinization temperature for a fixed period of time. Significant progress in heat-moisture treatment has been made during the last 15 years, as reflected by numerous publications on this subject. Therefore, this review summarizes the current knowledge on the impact of heat-moisture treatment on the composition, granule morphology, crystallinity, X-ray pattern, granular swelling, amylose leaching, pasting properties, gelatinization and retrogradation parameters, and susceptibility towards α-amylase and acid hydrolysis. The application of heat-moisture treatment in the food industry is also reviewed. Recommendations for future research are outlined.

265 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that metabolic profiles are age dependent and might reflect different aging processes, such as incomplete mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation.
Abstract: Understanding the complexity of aging is of utmost importance. This can now be addressed by the novel and powerful approach of metabolomics. However, to date, only a few metabolic studies based on large samples are available. Here, we provide novel and specific information on age-related metabolite concentration changes in human homeostasis. We report results from two population-based studies: the KORA F4 study from Germany as a discovery cohort, with 1038 female and 1124 male participants (32-81 years), and the TwinsUK study as replication, with 724 female participants. Targeted metabolomics of fasting serum samples quantified 131 metabolites by FIA-MS/MS. Among these, 71/34 metabolites were significantly associated with age in women/men (BMI adjusted). We further identified a set of 13 independent metabolites in women (with P values ranging from 4.6 × 10(-04) to 7.8 × 10(-42) , α(corr) = 0.004). Eleven of these 13 metabolites were replicated in the TwinsUK study, including seven metabolite concentrations that increased with age (C0, C10:1, C12:1, C18:1, SM C16:1, SM C18:1, and PC aa C28:1), while histidine decreased. These results indicate that metabolic profiles are age dependent and might reflect different aging processes, such as incomplete mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. The use of metabolomics will increase our understanding of aging networks and may lead to discoveries that help enhance healthy aging.

264 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In newborn siblings of children with atopic disease exclusively breast‐fed for a minimum of six weeks, the incidence of eczema, recurrent wheezing, elevated serum IgE, IgE‐antibodies to cow's milk, complement activation in vivo after milk challenge and hemagglutinating antibodies to β‐lactoglobulin was significantly lower compared with formula‐fed matched group.
Abstract: The effect of exclusive breast feeding in the first few weeks after birth on infant morbidity due to infectious and allergic disorders was investigated in three separate prospective studies. In a rural community in India, breast-fed infants had a significantly lower incidence of respiratory infection, otitis, diarrhoea, dehydration and pneumonia. In an urban population in Canada, breast feeding was associated with a marked decrease in the occurrence of otitis and respiratory disease and to a lesser extent of diarrhoea and dehydration. In newborn siblings of children with atopic disease exclusively breast-fed for a minimum of six weeks, the incidence of eczema, recurrent wheezing, elevated serum IgE-antibodies to cow's milk, complement activation in vivo after milk challenge and hemagglutinating antibodies to beta-lactoglobulin was significantly lower compared with formula-fed matched group. These observations provide clinical data attesting the immunologic advantages of human milk.

264 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a model for ophiolite obducton is presented based on a palinspastic reconstruction of the allochthonous rocks on the Oman continental margin.
Abstract: Metamorphic rocks showing an inverted metamorphic zonation from upper amphibolite fades immediately beneath the peridotite to greenschist fades at lower levels, crop out discontinuously along the base of the Semail ophiolite thrust sheet in the Oman Mountains of eastern Arabia. These metamorphic rocks show polyphase deformation, mylonitic fabrics, and have been disrupted, folded and imbricated, and in places form tectonic inclusions in a serpentinite melange. In the more intact sequences, garnet-clinopyroxene amphibolites, with rare hornblende-bearing marbles and banded quartzites, occur at the higher levels, whilst a wide range of metasedimentary and metabasaltic rocks occur in the greenschist fades. Low glaucophane content of amphiboles and low jadeite content of clinopyroxenes suggest relatively low pressures of crystallisation. The distribution coefficient KD for co-existing garnet and clinopyroxene suggests a temperature range of 670 to 750°C. Residual heat from the recently formed ophiolite probably provided the dominant heat source for metamorphism, although frictional heating could have supplemented this. The metamorphic rocks were produced during Cenomanian-Turonian (late Cretaceous) times.The sub-ophiolite metamorphic rocks, together with basal serpentinite, Triassic alkaline and tholeiitic basalts (Haybi volcanic group), mountain-sized ‘exotic’ limestones and an upper Cretaceous sedimentary melange, comprise a distinct thrust slice termed the Haybi complex, which always overlies marine sediments of the allochthonous Hawasina complex and underlies the Semail ophiolite. The rocks of the Haybi complex are bounded by major thrust planes, the Semail thrust above and the Haybi thrust beneath, which truncate all schistosities, fold axes, imbricate thrusts and associated features. A model for ophiolite obducton is presented based on a palinspastic reconstruction of the allochthonous rocks on the Oman continental margin.

263 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors identify the gap between claim and evidence and suggest an agenda for future research on the personality-dampening effect of strong situations.
Abstract: A conventional wisdom in personality and social psychology and organizational behavior is that personality matters most in weak situations and least in strong situations. The authors trace the origins of this claim and examine the evidence for the personality-dampening effect of strong situations. The authors identify the gap between claim and evidence and suggest an agenda for future research.

263 citations


Authors

Showing all 13990 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Daniel Levy212933194778
Rakesh K. Jain2001467177727
Peter W.F. Wilson181680139852
Martin G. Larson171620117708
Peter B. Jones145185794641
Dafna D. Gladman129103675273
Guoyao Wu12276456270
Fereidoon Shahidi11995157796
David Harvey11573894678
Robert C. Haddon11257752712
Se-Kwon Kim10276339344
John E. Dowling9430528116
Mark J. Sarnak9439342485
William T. Greenough9320029230
Soottawat Benjakul9289134336
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202386
2022269
20211,808
20201,749
20191,568
20181,516