Institution
Suffolk University
Education•Boston, Massachusetts, United States•
About: Suffolk University is a education organization based out in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Sugar beet. The organization has 6462 authors who have published 9321 publications receiving 235328 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Two broad topics are discussed that it is necessary for researchers to engage at an early stage with those responsible for implementation and recognize that reserve selection should be part of a broader conservation planning process centred on a stakeholder-developed implementation strategy.
Abstract: Smith, R. J., Eastwood, P. D., Ota, Y., and Rogers, S. I. 2009. Developing best practice for using Marxan to locate Marine Protected Areas in European waters. - ICES Journal of Marine Science, 66: 188-194.Several recent studies have investigated the use of the conservation planning software Marxan to design Marine Protected Area (MPA) networks in UK waters. The systematic conservation planning approach embodied by Marxan has a number of advantages, but these studies have highlighted the need for guidance and advice on best practice. Here, we discuss two broad topics that we feel should inform future developments in the UK and elsewhere in the European Union. First, several technical issues need to be addressed to ensure the scientific defensibility of any conservation planning project. These include identifying which conservation features should be represented in an MPA system, developing a system for setting representation targets, and identifying which data should be included to minimize conflict with human uses of the sea. Second, it is necessary for researchers to engage at an early stage with those responsible for implementation and recognize that reserve selection should be part of a broader conservation planning process centred on a stakeholder-developed implementation strategy. A more-inclusive approach will make use of technical outputs, such as those generated by Marxan, as part of the process of policy development.
71 citations
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TL;DR: There had been a cooler winter in 1996/1997, allowing slower crop development and more cold hardening, therefore the frosts in the spring of 1997 did not inflict obvious damage, and the assumption that low PPDs are more resistant to frost than high P PDs is challenged.
71 citations
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TL;DR: Comparison of the spawning sites in 1995 with historical data suggests that the locations of cod, plaice and sole egg production in the Irish Sea have probably remained relatively constant over the last 30 years.
Abstract: Eleven ichthyoplankton cruises were undertaken covering most of the Irish Sea during the period February to June, 1995. To identify spawning localities and investigate temporal trends in egg production, the data on stage 1 A egg distributions of cod (Gadus morhua), plaice (Pleuronectes platessa) and sole (Solea solea) have been modelled using generalized additive models (GAMs). A two-stage approach was adopted where presence/absence was firstly modelled as a binary process and a GAM surface subsequently fitted to egg production (conditional on presence). We demonstrate that this approach can be used to model egg production both in space and in time. The spawning sites for cod, plaice and sole in the Irish Sea were defined in terms of the probability of egg occurrence. For cod, we demonstrate that by integrating under predicted egg production surfaces, a cumulative production curve can be generated and used to define percentiles of production and thus delimit the extent of the spawning season. However, for plaice and sole, the surveys did not fully cover the spawning season and the limitations that this imposes on GAM modelling of these data are discussed. Comparison of the spawning sites in 1995 with historical data suggests that the locations of cod, plaice and sole egg production in the Irish Sea have probably remained relatively constant over the last 30 years.
71 citations
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TL;DR: Overall this study shows that M. anisopliae is efficacious in all growing media and compatible with conventional insecticides and offers much promise for the control of thrips as part of an integrated pest management program.
71 citations
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TL;DR: Preliminary support is provided for the relevance of valued action in understanding the functional impairment associated with GAD, and the beneficial effects of an acceptance‐based behavior therapy in increasing valued action are provided.
Abstract: Background—Theory and research suggest that generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is associated with diminished quality of life and restriction in valued action. The purpose of this study was to examine the relevance of values-consistent behavior (valued action) in understanding the impairment in quality of life in GAD. Method—Treatment-seeking clients with a principal diagnosis of GAD (n=30) were compared with demographically matched non-anxious controls (n=30) using self-report measures. Results—Participants with GAD reported significantly less valued action compared with controls, and within the GAD group, diminished valued action was not fully explained by depression comorbidity. Valued action was significantly correlated with measures of experiential avoidance, distress about emotions, and quality of life. Further, consistent with a theoretical model of GAD, restrictions in valued action contributed unique variance to diminished quality of life over and above the contributions of gender, GAD severity, experiential avoidance, distress about emotions, and depression comorbidity. Finally, an acceptance-based behavioral therapy significantly improved self-reports of valued action for GAD clients with 40% achieving clinically significant change in this domain. Conclusion—The findings provide preliminary support for the relevance of valued action in understanding the functional impairment associated with GAD, and the beneficial effects of an acceptance-based behavior therapy in increasing valued action.
71 citations
Authors
Showing all 6484 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Peter Hall | 132 | 1640 | 85019 |
Michael R. Hamblin | 117 | 899 | 59533 |
Miao Liu | 111 | 993 | 59811 |
Rosalind W. Picard | 100 | 461 | 44750 |
Simon Jennings | 94 | 240 | 29030 |
John A. Clark | 94 | 440 | 62221 |
Christopher Hawkes | 93 | 423 | 41658 |
Melanie J. Davies | 89 | 814 | 36939 |
Andrew Smith | 87 | 1025 | 34127 |
Andrew Jones | 83 | 695 | 28290 |
Catherine E. Costello | 82 | 411 | 24811 |
Paul O'Brien | 79 | 808 | 28228 |
Rhys E. Green | 78 | 285 | 30428 |
Nicholas K. Dulvy | 72 | 193 | 22962 |
David L.H. Bennett | 69 | 322 | 17388 |