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Institution

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 & Context (language use). 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: Exercise addiction is an area of great speculation with only limited evidence for its existence as discussed by the authors, despite a growing body of such literature, there have been few empirical reports and very few case studies.
Abstract: Exercise addiction is an area of great speculation with only limited evidence for its existence. Despite a growing body of such literature, there have been few empirical reports and very few case s...

153 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper reviewed the changes in structural characteristics of the fruit machine over the last decade, focusing on the small changes to established structural characteristics (e.g., the near miss, sound effects, light effects, colour effects, event frequencies etc.) as well as speculative examination of new and contemporary characteristics such as the importance of "features" and the psychology of familiarity.
Abstract: Over the past three decades, a number of authors have examined the role of structural characteristics as they appear to be important in the acquisition, development and maintenance of gambling behaviour. Furthermore, it has been argued that fruit machine gambling features more gambling-inducing structural characteristics than all other forms of gambling. However, it is clear that previous overviews in this area are now out of date in a number of key areas. This paper therefore reviews the changes in structural characteristics of the fruit machine over the last decade. Important changes in the structural characteristics of fruit machines will be discussed focusing on the small changes to established structural characteristics (e.g., the near miss, sound effects, light effects, colour effects, event frequencies etc.) as well as a more speculative examination of new and contemporary characteristics such as the importance of “features” and the psychology of familiarity.

153 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Bernard A. Fox1, Bernard A. Fox2, Dolores J. Schendel, Lisa H. Butterfield3, Steinar Aamdal4, James P. Allison5, James P. Allison6, Paolo A. Ascierto, Michael B. Atkins7, Jirina Bartunkova8, Lothar Bergmann9, Neil L. Berinstein, Cristina Bonorino10, Ernest C. Borden11, Jonathan L. Bramson12, Cedrik M. Britten13, Xuetao Cao14, Xuetao Cao15, William E. Carson16, Alfred E. Chang17, Dainius Characiejus18, A. Raja Choudhury19, George Coukos20, Tanja D. de Gruijl21, Robert O. Dillman, Harry Dolstra22, Glenn Dranoff7, Lindy G. Durrant23, James H. Finke11, Jérôme Galon24, Jared Gollob25, Cécile Gouttefangeas26, Fabio Grizzi, Michele Guida, Leif Håkansson27, Kristen Hege28, Kristen Hege29, Ronald B. Herberman, F. Stephen Hodi7, Axel Hoos30, Christoph Huber13, Patrick Hwu31, Kohzoh Imai32, Elizabeth M. Jaffee33, Sylvia Janetzki, Carl H. June20, Pawel Kalinski3, Howard L. Kaufman34, Koji Kawakami35, Yutaka Kawakami36, Ulrich Keilholtz37, Samir N. Khleif38, Rolf Kiessling39, Beatrix Kotlan, Guido Kroemer40, Réjean Lapointe41, Hyam I. Levitsky33, Michael T. Lotze3, Cristina Maccalli42, Michele Maio, Jens Peter Marschner43, Michael J. Mastrangelo44, Giuseppe Masucci39, Ignacio Melero45, C. J. M. Melief46, William J. Murphy47, Brad H. Nelson48, Andrea Nicolini49, Michael I. Nishimura50, Kunle Odunsi51, Pamela S. Ohashi52, Jill O'Donnell-Tormey53, Lloyd J. Old54, Christian H. Ottensmeier55, Michael Papamichail, Giorgio Parmiani42, Graham Pawelec26, Enrico Proietti56, Shukui Qin, Robert C. Rees57, Antoni Ribas58, Ruggero Ridolfi, Gerd Ritter6, Gerd Ritter54, Licia Rivoltini, Pedro Romero59, Mohamed L. Salem60, Rik J. Scheper21, Barbara Seliger, Padmanee Sharma31, Hiroshi Shiku61, Harpreet Singh-Jasuja, Wenru Song62, Per thor Straten63, Hideaki Tahara32, Zhigang Tian64, Zhigang Tian65, Sjoerd H. van der Burg46, Paul von Hoegen, Ena Wang38, Marij J. P. Welters46, Hauke Winter66, Tara Withington67, Jedd D. Wolchok6, Weihua Xiao64, Laurence Zitvogel40, Heinz Zwierzina68, Francesco M. Marincola38, Thomas F. Gajewski69, Jon M. Wigginton30, Mary L. Disis70 
Oregon Health & Science University1, Providence Portland Medical Center2, University of Pittsburgh3, University of Oslo4, Howard Hughes Medical Institute5, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center6, Harvard University7, Charles University in Prague8, Goethe University Frankfurt9, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul10, Cleveland Clinic11, McMaster University12, University of Mainz13, Peking Union Medical College14, Second Military Medical University15, Ohio State University16, University of Michigan17, Vilnius University18, University of Queensland19, University of Pennsylvania20, VU University Amsterdam21, Radboud University Nijmegen22, University of Nottingham23, French Institute of Health and Medical Research24, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals25, University of Tübingen26, Lund University27, Celgene28, University of California, San Francisco29, Bristol-Myers Squibb30, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center31, University of Tokyo32, Johns Hopkins University33, Rush University Medical Center34, Kyoto University35, Keio University36, Charité37, National Institutes of Health38, Karolinska Institutet39, Institut Gustave Roussy40, Université de Montréal41, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University42, Merck KGaA43, Thomas Jefferson University44, University of Navarra45, Leiden University46, University of California, Davis47, University of British Columbia48, University of Pisa49, Loyola University Chicago50, Roswell Park Cancer Institute51, University of Toronto52, Cancer Research Institute53, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research54, University of Southampton55, Istituto Superiore di Sanità56, Nottingham Trent University57, University of California, Los Angeles58, University of Lausanne59, Tanta University60, Mie University61, Millennium Pharmaceuticals62, University of Copenhagen63, University of Science and Technology of China64, Shandong University65, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich66, Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer67, Innsbruck Medical University68, University of Chicago69, University of Washington70
TL;DR: The critical hurdles identified by representatives of the collaborating organizations, now organized as the World Immunotherapy Council, are presented and discussed in this report.
Abstract: Scientific discoveries that provide strong evidence of antitumor effects in preclinical models often encounter significant delays before being tested in patients with cancer. While some of these delays have a scientific basis, others do not. We need to do better. Innovative strategies need to move into early stage clinical trials as quickly as it is safe, and if successful, these therapies should efficiently obtain regulatory approval and widespread clinical application. In late 2009 and 2010 the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC), convened an "Immunotherapy Summit" with representatives from immunotherapy organizations representing Europe, Japan, China and North America to discuss collaborations to improve development and delivery of cancer immunotherapy. One of the concepts raised by SITC and defined as critical by all parties was the need to identify hurdles that impede effective translation of cancer immunotherapy. With consensus on these hurdles, international working groups could be developed to make recommendations vetted by the participating organizations. These recommendations could then be considered by regulatory bodies, governmental and private funding agencies, pharmaceutical companies and academic institutions to facilitate changes necessary to accelerate clinical translation of novel immune-based cancer therapies. The critical hurdles identified by representatives of the collaborating organizations, now organized as the World Immunotherapy Council, are presented and discussed in this report. Some of the identified hurdles impede all investigators; others hinder investigators only in certain regions or institutions or are more relevant to specific types of immunotherapy or first-in-humans studies. Each of these hurdles can significantly delay clinical translation of promising advances in immunotherapy yet if overcome, have the potential to improve outcomes of patients with cancer.

152 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The United Nations General Assembly agreed and approved in September 2015 the document ‘2030 Agenda for sustainable development’, which contains a set of measures aiming to balance economic progres....
Abstract: The United Nations General Assembly agreed and approved in September 2015 the document ‘2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development’, which contains a set of measures aiming to balance economic progres...

152 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the functions of representational systems and the evolution of representation systems over time, and investigate the nature of representation and its nature in the service of expression.
Abstract: Preface Pt. IDrawing Systems Ch. 3Topology and Extendedness Pt. IIDenotation Systems Ch. 5Line Drawing Ch. 6Optical Denotation Systems Pt. IIIPicture Production Ch. 8Picture Production as a Process Pt. IVThe Functions of Representational Systems Ch. 10Flattening the Picture Surface Ch. 11Anomaly in the Service of Expression Ch. 12Investigating the Nature of Depiction Pt. VChanges in Representational Systems Over Time Ch. 14Historical Changes Notes Glossary References Index

151 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