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Nottingham Trent University

EducationNottingham, United Kingdom
About: Nottingham Trent University is a education organization based out in Nottingham, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Addiction. The organization has 4702 authors who have published 12862 publications receiving 307430 citations. The organization is also known as: NTU & Trent Polytechnic.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using IPCC data for pCO2 and pH under four future emissions scenarios (to the year 2100), a chemical speciation model is used to predict changes in the distribution of organic and inorganic forms of trace metals.
Abstract: Rising concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide are causing acidification of the oceans. This results in changes to the concentrations of key chemical species such as hydroxide, carbonate and bicarbonate ions. These changes will affect the distribution of different forms of trace metals. Using IPCC data for pCO2 and pH under four future emissions scenarios (to the year 2100) we use a chemical speciation model to predict changes in the distribution of organic and inorganic forms of trace metals. Under a scenario where emissions peak after the year 2100, predicted free ion Al, Fe, Cu, and Pb concentrations increase by factors of up to approximately 21, 2.4, 1.5, and 2.0 respectively. Concentrations of organically complexed metal typically have a lower sensitivity to ocean acidification induced changes. Concentrations of organically complexed Mn, Cu, Zn, and Cd fall by up to 10%, while those of organically complexed Fe, Co, and Ni rise by up to 14%. Although modest, these changes may have significance for the biological availability of metals given the close adaptation of marine microorganisms to their environment.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the results of a series of laboratory tests carried out to investigate the factors controlling the interface shear strength between geomembranes and geotextiles.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the extended TPB appears to be an efficient model with the focus on attitude, knowledge, risk perception, and past influenza vaccination uptake behaviors in explaining students' intention for COVID-19 vaccination.
Abstract: Objective: The Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) is one of the most robust models in explaining health-related behavior. In this study, we tested the extended TPB to predict university students' intentions to uptake COVID-19 vaccination.Methods: An online cross-sectional survey was developed to investigate students' intention to uptake the COVID-19 vaccine based on the components of the TPB (i.e., attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control) and extended components (i.e., knowledge about COVID-19, risk perception of COVID-19, and past influenza vaccination behavior). Non-probability sampling was used to collect data from 3145 students from 43 universities in mainland China in January 2021. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was applied to examine the proposed model. Enrolled students were relatively young (mean age = 20.80 years; SD = 2.09), half of them are female (50.2%), and most of them were studying in undergraduate programs (n = 3026; 96.2%).Results: The results showed that students' knowledge of the COVID-19 vaccine and risk perception of COVID-19 positively influenced their attitude toward the uptake of a COVID-19 vaccine. Also, students' attitude toward COVID-19 vaccination uptake and their past influenza vaccination uptake behaviors were positively associated with the intention to uptake COVID-19 vaccination. Subjective norm and perceived behavioral control were not significant predictors for the intention to uptake COVID-19 vaccination (R2 = 0.49).Conclusions: The present study demonstrated that the extended TPB appears to be an efficient model with the focus on attitude, knowledge, risk perception, and past influenza vaccination uptake behaviors in explaining students' intention for COVID-19 vaccination.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Eye temperature could be used as an objective and immediate measure of how an animal is responding to a specific situation in order to evaluate management procedures and adapt them where appropriate to reduce the negative impact on animal health and welfare.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the marriage analogy in relationship marketing as used by many marketing authors is given in this article, where the metaphor fails to deliver on issues concerning the number of parties involved in the relationship, on the attendant costs and benefits, on willingness of the parties involved and on the "ideal" timescale of the relationship.
Abstract: This paper offers a review of the marriage analogy in relationship marketing as used by many marketing authors. Accepting a Christian view of marriage as adopted in Levitt's seminal paper, marriage is seen as a successful, public, contractual, and monogamous relationship, freely entered into by two consenting adults of different genders, which is intended to endure a lifetime. However, while parallels do exist in relationship development, the metaphor fails to deliver on issues concerning the number of parties involved in the relationship, on the attendant costs and benefits, on the willingness of the parties involved and on the “ideal” timescale of the relationship. Parallels from the full range of relationships between the sexes, both functional and dysfunctional, suggest polygamy, prostitution, stalking, rape, and seduction may be more apposite.

85 citations


Authors

Showing all 4806 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
Paul Mitchell146137895659
Matthew Nguyen131129184346
Ian O. Ellis126105175435
Mark D. Griffiths124123861335
Tao Zhang123277283866
Graham J. Hutchings9799544270
Andrzej Cichocki9795241471
Chris Ryan9597134388
Graham Pawelec8957227373
Christopher D. Buckley8844025664
Ester Cerin7827927086
Michael Hofreiter7827120628
Craig E. Banks7756927520
John R. Griffiths7635623179
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202346
2022144
20211,405
20201,278
2019973
2018825