Institution
Saint Mary's University
Education•Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada•
About: Saint Mary's University is a education organization based out in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Stars. The organization has 1931 authors who have published 4993 publications receiving 143226 citations.
Topics: Population, Stars, Galaxy, Volcanic rock, Basalt
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the state/civil society interrelations that have helped to bring about changes in state forms in Canada and Britain, and argue that state and civil society interaction explains the novel patterns that are taking shape with the materialisation of a'social investment perspective' and child welfare reform strategy.
Abstract: This article calls into question the assumptions of leading welfare state theorists who rely on path dependency approaches and ‘permanent austerity’ theses to inform their analyses. In contrast, drawing on public policy approaches that acknowledge paradigm shifts, and feminist state and social movement theorisation, we examine the state/civil society interrelations that have helped to bring about changes in state forms in Canada and Britain. We argue that state/civil society interaction explains the novel patterns that are taking shape in Canada and Britain with the materialisation of a ‘social investment perspective’ and child welfare reform strategy. We examine not only new institutions and new policies, but also new meanings and new roles for different groups.
40 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the upwelling plume induced lithospheric melting which produced the parental magmas of the evolved tholeiites were probably derived from subcontinental lithosphere.
40 citations
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TL;DR: This paper examines how the importance of religion or spirituality in one’s life associates with mental health, and finds the secularized and the highly religious are found almost equally more likely to rate their mental health as excellent, than the individuals with average religiosity.
Abstract: Using the latest mental health cycle of the Canadian Community Health Survey (N = 20,868), this paper examines how the importance of religion or spirituality in one’s life associates with mental health. Based on this question, the population is divided into three groups of high religiosity, average religiosity, and secularized. Secularized individuals are shown to have large deficits in all the psychological markers suggested to mediate the relationship between religiosity and mental health, compared to the two other groups. In spite of these deficits, the secularized and the highly religious are found almost equally more likely to rate their mental health as excellent, than the individuals with average religiosity. Interestingly, these two groups are also more likely to rate their mental health as poor. Considering the ability to deal with day-to-day demands and unexpected problems in life as the dependent variable yields comparable results. Various explanations are explored.
40 citations
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TL;DR: Phylogenetic analysis showed a close relationship between Chinese domesticated barley and the Tibetan wild barley, suggesting that Tibet wild barley was the ancestor of Chinese domestication barley, and favor the polyphyletic origin for cultivated barley.
Abstract: The importance of wild barley from Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in the origin and domestication of cultivated barley has long been underestimated. Population-based phylogenetic analyses were performed to study the origin and genetic diversity of Chinese domesticated barley, and address the possibility that the Tibetan region in China was an independent center of barley domestication. Wild barley (Hordeum vulgare ssp. spontaneum) populations from Southwest Asia, Central Asia, and Tibet along with domesticated barley from China were analyzed using two nuclear genes. Our results showed that Tibetan wild barley distinctly diverged from Southwest Asian (Near East) wild barley, that Central Asian wild barley is related to Southwest Asian wild barley, and that Chinese domesticated barley shares the same haplotypes with Tibetan wild barley. Phylogenetic analysis showed a close relationship between Chinese domesticated barley and the Tibetan wild barley, suggesting that Tibetan wild barley was the ancestor of Chinese domesticated barley. Our results favor the polyphyletic origin for cultivated barley.
40 citations
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TL;DR: Three main QTL cluster regions associated with the 10 agronomic traits on chromosome 2H, 4H and 7H were detected and will be useful for marker-assisted selection (MAS) in barley breeding.
Abstract: Increasing the yield of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) is a main breeding goal in developing barley cultivars. A high density genetic linkage map containing 1894 SNP and 68 SSR markers covering 1375.8 cM was constructed and used for mapping quantitative traits. A late-generation double haploid population (DH) derived from the Huaai 11 × Huadamai 6 cross was used to identify QTLs and QTL × environment interactions for ten traits affecting grain yield including length of main spike (MSL), spikelet number on main spike (SMS), spikelet number per plant (SLP), grain number per plant (GP), grain weight per plant (GWP), grain number per spike (GS), thousand grain weight (TGW), grain weight per spike (GWS), spike density (SPD) and spike number per plant (SP). In single environment analysis using composite interval mapping (CIM), a total of 221 QTLs underlying the ten traits were detected in five consecutive years (2009–2013). The QTLs detected in each year were 50, 48, 41, 41 and 41 for the year 2009 to 2013. The QTLs associated with these traits were generally clustered on chromosome 2H, 4H and 7H. In multi-environment analysis, a total of 111 significant QTLs including 18 for MSL, 16 for SMS, 15 for SPD, 5 for SP, 4 for SLP, 14 for TGW, 5 for GP, 11 for GS, 8 for GWP, and 15 for GWS were detected in the five years. Most QTLs showed significant QTL × environment interactions (QEI), nine QTLs (qIMSL3-1, qIMSL4-1, qIMSL4-2, qIMSL6-1, qISMS7-1, qISPD2-7, qISPD7-1, qITGW3-1 and qIGWS4-3) were detected with minimal QEI effects and stable in different years. Among 111 QTLs,71 (63.40 %) QTLs were detected in both single and multiple environments. Three main QTL cluster regions associated with the 10 agronomic traits on chromosome 2H, 4H and 7H were detected. The QTLs for SMS, SLP, GP and GWP were located in the region near Vrs1 on chromosome 2H. The QTLs underlying SMS, SPD and SLP were clustered on chromosome 4H. On the terminal of chromosome 7H, there was a QTL cluster associated with TGW, SPD, GWP and GWS. The information will be useful for marker-assisted selection (MAS) in barley breeding.
40 citations
Authors
Showing all 1958 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Scott Chapman | 118 | 579 | 46199 |
Michael J. Zaworotko | 97 | 519 | 44441 |
Brad K. Gibson | 94 | 564 | 38959 |
Christine D. Wilson | 90 | 528 | 39198 |
Peter A. Cawood | 87 | 362 | 27832 |
Mark D. Fleming | 81 | 433 | 36107 |
Julian Barling | 75 | 262 | 22478 |
Winslow R. Briggs | 74 | 269 | 19375 |
Ian G. McCarthy | 71 | 204 | 17912 |
Tomislav Friščić | 70 | 294 | 18307 |
Nico Eisenhauer | 66 | 400 | 15746 |
Warren E. Piers | 64 | 217 | 14555 |
Amanda I. Karakas | 63 | 321 | 12797 |
Yuichi Terashima | 59 | 259 | 11994 |
Colin Mason | 58 | 236 | 12490 |