Institution
RMIT University
Education•Melbourne, Victoria, Australia•
About: RMIT University is a education organization based out in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 40468 authors who have published 82923 publications receiving 1729499 citations. The organization is also known as: Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology & Melbourne Technical College.
Topics: Population, Health care, Context (language use), Medicine, Mental health
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the nonlinear free vibration of a multi-layer polymer nanocomposite beam reinforced by graphene platelets (GPLs) non-uniformly distributed along the thickness direction is studied.
249 citations
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University of California, Berkeley1, University of Sydney2, Yonsei University3, University of British Columbia4, University of Lagos5, RMIT University6, Loughborough University7, Tunis University8, Tsinghua University9, National University of Singapore10, University of Southern California11, De Montfort University12, University of Tehran13, Qatar University14, Chalmers University of Technology15, The Catholic University of America16, University of Tokyo17, University of Oregon18, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina19, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory20, CEPT University21, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology22, Oxford Brookes University23, Polytechnic University of Milan24, Autonomous University of Baja California25, Tokyo City University26, University of Wollongong27, Waseda University28, University of Southampton29, Technical University of Denmark30, Harbin Institute of Technology31, University of Edinburgh32, Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology33, South China University of Technology34, Tongji University35
TL;DR: The ASHRAE Global Thermal Comfort Database II (Comfort Database II) as discussed by the authors is an open-source thermal comfort database that includes approximately 81,846 complete sets of objective indoor climatic observations with accompanying subjective evaluations by the building occupants who were exposed to them.
249 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a comprehensive review of both commercially available materials as well as research activities related to recent progress on high-performance polymer nanocomposites that are being used in various AM techniques.
249 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that maternal duplication of the proximal chromosome 7 causes neonatal lethality and this region is syntenic with human chromosome 19q13.3 (refs 10,11), where the genes for myotonic dystrophy and a putative tumour suppressor gene are located12,13.
Abstract: Genetic and embryological studies in the mouse demonstrated functional differences between parental chromosomes during development. This is due to imprinted genes whose expression is dependent on their parental origin. In a recent systematic screen for imprinted genes, we detected Peg3 (paternally expressed gene 3). Peg3 is not expressed in parthenogenones. In interspecific hybrids, only the paternal copy of the gene is expressed in the embryos, individual tissues examined in d9.5-13.5 embryos, neonates and adults. Peg3 mRNA is a 9 kb transcript encoding an unusual zinc finger protein with eleven widely spaced C2H2 type motifs and two groups of amino acid repeats. Peg3 is expressed in early somites, branchial arches and other mesodermal tissues, as well as in the hypothalamus. Peg3 maps to the proximal region of chromosome 7. Consistent with our findings, maternal duplication of the proximal chromosome 7 causes neonatal lethality. This region is syntenic with human chromosome 19q13.1-13.3 (refs 10,11), where the genes for myotonic dystrophy and a putative tumour suppressor gene are located.
248 citations
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TL;DR: A concise summary of field and laboratory methods for the measurement of dietary intake with particular reference to the assessment of energy and protein intake and to the pitfalls and difficulties that may be encountered in practice when implementing the methods.
Abstract: To provide a concise summary of field and laboratory methods for the measurement of dietary intake with particular reference to the assessment of energy and protein intake and to the pitfalls and difficulties that may be encountered in practice when implementing the methods both in the field and under laboratory conditions.
248 citations
Authors
Showing all 40792 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kari Stefansson | 206 | 794 | 174819 |
Martin White | 196 | 2038 | 232387 |
Unnur Thorsteinsdottir | 167 | 444 | 121009 |
Vilmundur Gudnason | 159 | 837 | 123802 |
Nicholas J. Talley | 158 | 1571 | 90197 |
Wei Zheng | 151 | 1929 | 120209 |
Ashok Kumar | 151 | 5654 | 164086 |
Timothy P. Hughes | 145 | 831 | 91357 |
John D. Potter | 137 | 795 | 75310 |
Dimitrios Trichopoulos | 135 | 818 | 84992 |
Simon C. Watkins | 135 | 950 | 68358 |
Eiliv Lund | 133 | 856 | 83087 |
Albert V. Smith | 132 | 411 | 104809 |
Frank Caruso | 131 | 641 | 61748 |
Jeff A. Sloan | 129 | 656 | 65308 |