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Institution

Monash University

EducationMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
About: Monash University is a education organization based out in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 35920 authors who have published 100681 publications receiving 3027002 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors examined whether and how individual auditors affect audit outcomes using a large set of archival Chinese data and found that the effects of individual auditor characteristics on audit quality are both economically and statistically significant, and are pronounced in both large and small audit firms.
Abstract: We examine whether and how individual auditors affect audit outcomes using a large set of archival Chinese data. We analyze about 800 individual auditors and find that they exhibit significant variation in audit quality. The effects that individual auditors have on audit quality are both economically and statistically significant, and are pronounced in both large and small audit firms. We also find that the individual auditor effects on audit quality can be partially explained by auditor characteristics, such as educational background, Big N audit firm experience, rank in the audit firm, and political affiliation. Our findings highlight the importance of scrutinizing and understanding audit quality at the individual auditor level.

404 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2009-Brain
TL;DR: A systematic review of the case files of 242 donors with pathologically verified Parkinson's disease at the Queen Square Brain Bank for Neurological Disorders found a strong association between a non-tremor dominant disease pattern and cognitive disability and neuropathological examination failed to distinguish the other subtypes.
Abstract: We have carried out a systematic review of the case files of 242 donors with pathologically verified Parkinson's disease at the Queen Square Brain Bank for Neurological Disorders in an attempt to corroborate the data-driven subtype classification proposed by Lewis and colleagues (Heterogeneity of Parkinson's disease in the early clinical stages using a data driven approach. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2005; 76: 343-8). Cases were segregated into earlier disease onset (25%), tremor dominant (31%), non-tremor dominant (36%) and rapid disease progression without dementia (8%) subgroups. We found a strong association between a non-tremor dominant disease pattern and cognitive disability. The earlier disease onset group had the longest duration to death, and greatest delay to the onset of falls and cognitive decline. Patients with a tremor dominant disease pattern did not live significantly longer than non-tremor dominant patients and showed no difference in mean time to onset of falls and hallucinations. Rapid disease progression was associated with older age, early depression and early midline motor symptoms, and in 70% of the cases, tremulous onset. The non-tremor dominant subgroup had a significantly higher mean pathological grading of cortical Lewy bodies than all other groupings (P < 0.05) and more cortical amyloid-beta plaque load and cerebral amyloid angiopathy than early disease onset and tremor dominant groups (P = 0.047). An analysis of cases with pathologically defined neocortical Lewy body disease confirmed the link between bradykinetic onset, cognitive decline and Lewy body deposition in the neocortex. Although neuropathological examination failed to distinguish the other subtypes, the classification scheme was supported by an analysis of clinical data that were independent of the basic subgroup definitions.

404 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the 26Al and 60Fe yields produced by a generation of solar metallicity stars ranging in mass between 11 and 120 M☉, and quantified the relative contributions of various components.
Abstract: We present the 26Al and 60Fe yields produced by a generation of solar metallicity stars ranging in mass between 11 and 120 M☉. We discuss the production sites of these γ-ray emitters and quantify the relative contributions of the various components. We provide the contributions of the wind, the C convective shell, and the explosive Ne/C burning to the total 26Al yield together with the contributions of the He convective shell, the C convective shell, and the explosive Ne/C burning to the 60Fe yield. We conclude that, at variance with current beliefs, 26Al is mainly produced by the explosive C/Ne burning over most of the mass interval analyzed here, while 60Fe is mainly produced by the C convective shell and the He convective shell. By means of these yields we try to reproduce two quite strong observational constraints related to the abundances of these nuclei in the interstellar medium, i.e., the number of γ1.8 photons per Lyman continuum photon, RGxL, and the 60Fe/26Al γ-ray line flux ratio. RGxL is found to be roughly constant along the Galactic plane (and of the order of 1.25 × 10-11), while the 60Fe/26Al ratio has been recently measured by both RHESSI (0.17 ± 0.05) and SPI (INTEGRAL) (0.11 ± 0.03). We can quite successfully fit simultaneously both ratios for a quite large range of exponents of the power-law initial mass function. We also address the fit to γ2 Velorum, and we find that a quite large range of initial masses, at least from 40 to 60 M☉, do eject an amount of 26Al (through the wind) compatible with the current upper limit quoted for this W-R star: such a result removes a long-standing discrepancy between the models and the observational data.

402 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Patterns of beta-globin diversity suggest extensive worldwide late Pleistocene gene flow and are not easily reconciled with a unidirectional migration out of Africa 100,000 years ago and total replacement of archaic populations in Asia.
Abstract: A 3-kb region encompassing the beta-globin gene has been analyzed for allelic sequence polymorphism in nine populations from Africa, Asia, and Europe. A unique gene tree was constructed from 326 sequences of 349 in the total sample. New maximum-likelihood methods for analyzing gene trees on the basis of coalescence theory have been used. The most recent common ancestor of the beta-globin gene tree is a sequence found only in Africa and estimated to have arisen approximately 800,000 years ago. There is no evidence for an exponential expansion out of a bottlenecked founding population, and an effective population size of approximately 10,000 has been maintained. Modest differences in levels of beta-globin diversity between Africa and Asia are better explained by greater African effective population size than by greater time depth. There may have been a reduction of Asian effective population size in recent evolutionary history. Characteristically Asian ancestry is estimated to be older than 200,000 years, suggesting that the ancestral hominid population at this time was widely dispersed across Africa and Asia. Patterns of beta-globin diversity suggest extensive worldwide late Pleistocene gene flow and are not easily reconciled with a unidirectional migration out of Africa 100,000 years ago and total replacement of archaic populations in Asia.

401 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To investigate the nature and duration of clinical instability in hospital patients before a “critical event” (ie, a cardiac arrest or an unplanned admission to intensive care).
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the nature and duration of clinical instability (i.e., abnormalities in simple physical observations or laboratory test results) in hospital patients before a "critical event" (i.e., a cardiac arrest or an unplanned admission to intensive care). DESIGN: Retrospective survey of medical records of all patients having critical events (CEs) over 12 months. Data on hospital and Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients were obtained for comparison with the study population. SETTING: A 300-bed metropolitan teaching hospital with a seven-bed ICU. PATIENTS: All patients having CEs over a 12-month period (January to December 1997). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of patients with clinical instability before a CE; duration of clinical instability before a CE; number of medical reviews of each patient before a CE; mortality rate and length of hospital stay for all patients. RESULTS: There were 122 CEs in 112 patients (median, 1; range, 1-4). Of the CEs, 79 were unplanned ICU admissions (14 subsequent to cardiac arrest calls), and 43 were cardiac arrest calls not resulting in ICU admission. Each CE was preceded by a median of two (range, 0-9) criteria for clinical instability. The median duration of instability before a CE was 6.5 hours (range, 0-432 hours), and in that time a median of two (range, 0-13) medical reviews took place. The incidence of CEs in the total hospital population (122 CEs/19,853 admissions) and in ICU patients (79 unplanned admissions/515 admissions) was 0.6% and 15%, respectively. There were 70 deaths (62%) among the 112 patients, compared with a total of 392 deaths (2% of admissions) in the hospital, of which 107 were in ICU. CONCLUSIONS: Very few patients suffer a CE while in hospital. However, those who do frequently manifest abnormalities in simple physical observations and laboratory test results before the CE. More rapid intervention in response to warning signs might provide a better outcome for these patients.

401 citations


Authors

Showing all 36568 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Bert Vogelstein247757332094
Kenneth W. Kinzler215640243944
David J. Hunter2131836207050
David R. Williams1782034138789
Yang Yang1712644153049
Lei Jiang1702244135205
Dongyuan Zhao160872106451
Christopher J. O'Donnell159869126278
Leif Groop158919136056
Mark E. Cooper1581463124887
Theo Vos156502186409
Mark J. Smyth15371388783
Rinaldo Bellomo1471714120052
Detlef Weigel14251684670
Geoffrey Burnstock141148899525
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023250
20221,020
20219,402
20208,420
20197,409
20186,438