scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Alberta

EducationEdmonton, Alberta, Canada
About: University of Alberta is a education organization based out in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 65403 authors who have published 154847 publications receiving 5358338 citations. The organization is also known as: Ualberta & UAlberta.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors briefly outlines the history and development of the methodology of narrative inquiry and draws attention to the need for careful delineation of terms and assumptions, and issues of social significance, purpose and ethics are also outlined.
Abstract: The paper briefly outlines the history and development of the methodology of narrative inquiry. It draws attention to the need for careful delineation of terms and assumptions. A Deweyan view of experience is central to narrative inquiry methodology and is used to frame a metaphorical three-dimensional narrative inquiry space. An illustration from a recent narrative inquiry into curriculum making is used to show what narrative inquirers do. Issues of social significance, purpose and ethics are also outlined.

693 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the institutions and sites where regulation takes place affect both the outcome of the regulatory process and the legitimacy of the rules and practices produced, and that changes in regulatory processes affect opportunities for democratic control and legitimacy.
Abstract: This review paper argues that the institutions and sites of professionalization projects and regulatory processes matter. The institutions and locations where regulation takes place affect both the outcome of the regulatory process and the legitimacy of the rules and practices produced. Changes in regulatory processes affect opportunities for democratic control and legitimacy. A common position in the accounting literature is to examine both the process of professionalization and accounting and audit regulation within and around professional associations and related organizations, such as standard setting bodies and regulatory agencies. We argue that professional firms are increasingly important in professionalization and regulatory processes and have not received the attention that they warrant: an examination of the multi-national professional service firms (currently known as the Big 4) can enhance an understanding of professionalization and professional regulation. We suggest that these are important sites where accounting practices are themselves standardized and regulated, where accounting rules and standards are translated into practice, where professional identities are mediated, formed and transformed, and where important conceptions of personal, professional and corporate governance and management are transmitted.

691 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recent results by de la Mora and co-workers provide very strong evidence that small ions (in distinction from macroions such as bio-macroions) are produced by IEM, and macroions and particularly the polyprotonated globular proteins areproduced by CRM.
Abstract: A brief account of the mechanisms by which ions in solution are converted to ions in the gas phase is given on the basis of information available in the literature and the four companion articles on electrospray mass spectrometry (ESMS) in this issue. The following stages/phenomena are described: (a) production of the charged droplets at the ES capillary tip; (b) evolution of the charged droplets due to solvent evaporation and droplet fission caused by Coulombic repulsion of the charges on the droplets; production of the gas phase ion from very small charged droplets by the charge residue model (CRM) or the ion evaporation method (IEM); (c) dependence of the sensitivity in ESMS on the chemical nature of the analyte and its concentration as well as on the concentration of other electrolytes that are present in the solution; qualitative predictions on the sensitivity of the analyte based on the surface activity of the analyte ions; (d) relationship between ions produced in the gas phase and original ions present in the solution; and (e) globular proteins. Much of the information presented in (a)-(e) has been available for some time in the literature. However some significant advances are relatively recent. Recent results by de la Mora and co-workers, including their contribution in this Special Feature, provide very strong evidence that small ions (in distinction from macroions such as bio-macroions) are produced by IEM. On the other hand, macroions and particularly the polyprotonated globular proteins are produced by CRM. Also noteworthy is the development of an equation by Enke with which the observed relative ion signal intensities of the gas-phase ions produced can be predicted on the basis of the ion concentration in solution over a wide concentration range. The recognition that the sensitivity of organic analyte ions can be qualitatively predicted on the basis of the hydrophilicity or hydrophobicity of the part of the molecule that is not part of the charged (ionic) group and affects the surface activity of the ionic species is also noteworthy and a very useful relatively recent development.

690 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, three small-area models, of Battese, Harter, and Fuller (1988), Dempster, Rubin, and Tsutakawa (1981), and Fay and Herriot (1979), are investigated.
Abstract: Small-area estimation has received considerable attention in recent years because of a growing demand for reliable small-area statistics. The direct-survey estimators, based only on the data from a given small area (or small domain), are likely to yield unacceptably large standard errors because of small sample size in the domain. Therefore, alternative estimators that borrow strength from other related small areas have been proposed in the literature to improve the efficiency. These estimators use models, either implicitly or explicitly, that connect the small areas through supplementary (e.g., census and administrative) data. For example, simple synthetic estimators are based on implicit modeling. In this article, three small-area models, of Battese, Harter, and Fuller (1988), Dempster, Rubin, and Tsutakawa (1981), and Fay and Herriot (1979), are investigated. These models are all special cases of a general mixed linear model involving fixed and random effects, and a small-area mean can be expr...

690 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The 1000 bull genomes project supports the goal of accelerating the rates of genetic gain in domestic cattle while at the same time considering animal health and welfare by providing the annotated sequence variants and genotypes of key ancestor bulls.
Abstract: The 1000 bull genomes project supports the goal of accelerating the rates of genetic gain in domestic cattle while at the same time considering animal health and welfare by providing the annotated sequence variants and genotypes of key ancestor bulls. In the first phase of the 1000 bull genomes project, we sequenced the whole genomes of 234 cattle to an average of 8.3-fold coverage. This sequencing includes data for 129 individuals from the global Holstein-Friesian population, 43 individuals from the Fleckvieh breed and 15 individuals from the Jersey breed. We identified a total of 28.3 million variants, with an average of 1.44 heterozygous sites per kilobase for each individual. We demonstrate the use of this database in identifying a recessive mutation underlying embryonic death and a dominant mutation underlying lethal chrondrodysplasia. We also performed genome-wide association studies for milk production and curly coat, using imputed sequence variants, and identified variants associated with these traits in cattle.

690 citations


Authors

Showing all 66027 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Salim Yusuf2311439252912
Yi Chen2174342293080
Robert M. Califf1961561167961
Douglas R. Green182661145944
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Jiawei Han1681233143427
Jaakko Kaprio1631532126320
Tobin J. Marks1591621111604
Josef M. Penninger154700107295
Subir Sarkar1491542144614
Gerald M. Edelman14754569091
Rinaldo Bellomo1471714120052
P. Sinervo138151699215
David A. Jackson136109568352
Andreas Warburton135157897496
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of British Columbia
209.6K papers, 9.2M citations

99% related

University of Toronto
294.9K papers, 13.5M citations

98% related

University of Minnesota
257.9K papers, 11.9M citations

95% related

University of Wisconsin-Madison
237.5K papers, 11.8M citations

94% related

Cornell University
235.5K papers, 12.2M citations

94% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023234
20221,084
20219,315
20208,831
20198,177