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Institution

Queensland University of Technology

EducationBrisbane, Queensland, Australia
About: Queensland University of Technology is a education organization based out in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 14188 authors who have published 55022 publications receiving 1496237 citations. The organization is also known as: QUT.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The evidence for the occurrence of four of the most commonly documented indirect effects (apparent competition, indirect mutualism/commensalism, exploitative competition, and trophic cascades) in the invasion process is examined.
Abstract: Indirect effects involve more than two species and are defined as how one species alters the effect that another species has on a third. These complex interactions are often overlooked in studies of interactions between alien and native species, and their role in influencing biological invasions has been rarely considered. Based on a comprehensive review of the invasion biology literature, we examine the evidence for the occurrence of four of the most commonly documented indirect effects (apparent competition, indirect mutualism/commensalism, exploitative competition, and trophic cascades) in the invasion process. Studies investigating indirect effects in the context of invasion biology are relatively rare, but have been increasing in recent years, and there are sufficient examples to indicate that this kind of interaction is likely to be more common than is currently recognized. Whether indirect interactions are mediated by an alien or a native species, and whether they occur between ecologically similar or dissimilar alien and native species, depends in part on the type of interaction considered and no predictable patterns were detected in the literature. Further empirical studies will help to elucidate such patterns. At this stage, the inherent unpredictability of indirect interactions means that their impacts in relation to invasions are particularly challenging for land managers to deal with, and their role in invasions is a complex, but is a valuable area of investigation for researchers.

330 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: The BPM Handbook as discussed by the authors provides a framework that consolidates and structures the essential factors that constitute BPM as a whole, including strategic alignment, governance, methods, information technology, people, and culture.
Abstract: The previous chapters gave an insightful introduction into the various facets of Business Process Management. We now share a rich understanding of the essential ideas behind designing and managing processes for organizational purposes. We have also learned about the various streams of research and development that have influenced contemporary BPM. As a matter of fact, BPM has become a holistic management discipline. As such, it requires that a plethora of facets needs to be addressed for its successful und sustainable application. This chapter provides a framework that consolidates and structures the essential factors that constitute BPM as a whole. Drawing from research in the field of maturity models, we suggest six core elements of BPM: strategic alignment, governance, methods, information technology, people, and culture. These six elements serve as the structure for this BPM Handbook.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2016-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that plant species diversity decreased when a greater number of limiting nutrients were added across 45 grassland sites from a multi-continent experimental network, even after controlling for effects of plant biomass, and even where biomass production was not nutrient-limited.
Abstract: Niche dimensionality provides a general theoretical explanation for biodiversity-more niches, defined by more limiting factors, allow for more ways that species can coexist. Because plant species compete for the same set of limiting resources, theory predicts that addition of a limiting resource eliminates potential trade-offs, reducing the number of species that can coexist. Multiple nutrient limitation of plant production is common and therefore fertilization may reduce diversity by reducing the number or dimensionality of belowground limiting factors. At the same time, nutrient addition, by increasing biomass, should ultimately shift competition from belowground nutrients towards a one-dimensional competitive trade-off for light. Here we show that plant species diversity decreased when a greater number of limiting nutrients were added across 45 grassland sites from a multi-continent experimental network. The number of added nutrients predicted diversity loss, even after controlling for effects of plant biomass, and even where biomass production was not nutrient-limited. We found that elevated resource supply reduced niche dimensionality and diversity and increased both productivity and compositional turnover. Our results point to the importance of understanding dimensionality in ecological systems that are undergoing diversity loss in response to multiple global change factors.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This progress report reviews the developments in the field of self-healing polymers/composites and wearable devices thereof and some of the strong and weak points in the development of each self- healing device are clearly highlighted and criticized.
Abstract: Devices integrated with self-healing ability can benefit from long-term use as well as enhanced reliability, maintenance and durability. This progress report reviews the developments in the field of self-healing polymers/composites and wearable devices thereof. One part of the progress report presents and discusses several aspects of the self-healing materials chemistry (from non-covalent to reversible covalent-based mechanisms), as well as the required main approaches used for functionalizing the composites to enhance their electrical conductivity, magnetic, dielectric, electroactive and/or photoactive properties. The second and complementary part of the progress report links the self-healing materials with partially or fully self-healing device technologies, including wearable sensors, supercapacitors, solar cells and fabrics. Some of the strong and weak points in the development of each self-healing device are clearly highlighted and criticized, respectively. Several ideas regarding further improvement of soft self-healing devices are proposed.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is increasing evidence from animal studies in support of the concept of an active emmetropization mechanism which has potentially important clinical ramifications for the management of refractive errors, with emphasis given to work involving the chick, tree shrew and monkey, which represent the three most widely used animal models.

330 citations


Authors

Showing all 14597 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Nicholas G. Martin1921770161952
Paul M. Thompson1832271146736
Christopher J. O'Donnell159869126278
Robert G. Parton13645959737
Tim J Cole13682792998
Daniel I. Chasman13448472180
David Smith1292184100917
Dmitri Golberg129102461788
Chao Zhang127311984711
Shi Xue Dou122202874031
Thomas H. Marwick121106358763
Peter J. Anderson12096663635
Bruno S. Frey11990065368
David M. Evans11663274420
Michael Pollak11466357793
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023205
2022641
20214,219
20204,026
20193,623
20183,374