Institution
University of Gothenburg
Education•Gothenburg, Sweden•
About: University of Gothenburg is a education organization based out in Gothenburg, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 23855 authors who have published 65241 publications receiving 2606327 citations. The organization is also known as: Göteborg University & Gothenburg University.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Health care, Implant, Dementia
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue for the importance of political conflict as a means of initiating change in an institutionalist framework, arguing that conflict over ideas and the underlying assumptions of policy is important for motivating change.
Abstract: The conventional critique of institutional theory, and especially historical institutionalism, is that it is incapable of coping with change. We argue for the importance of political conflict as a means of initiating change in an institutionalist framework. In particular, conflict over ideas and the underlying assumptions of policy is important for motivating change. We demonstrate the viability of this argument with examples of institutional change.
563 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the role of water in the hydration process of Ca 3 SiO 5 (C 3 S) cement is investigated, and accelerating effects of adding colloidal silica (CS) are established.
562 citations
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McMaster University1, University of Kansas2, University of Tennessee Health Science Center3, University of Gothenburg4, Université de Montréal5, Lynn University6, University of Florida7, University of Nebraska Medical Center8, Pennsylvania State University9, Albert Einstein College of Medicine10, University of Bologna11, Medtronic plc12
TL;DR: Assessment of gastric emptying using a low fat meal: establishment of international control values and implications for food safety and quality.
562 citations
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562 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that the introduction of new genes into a severely inbred and isolated population of adders (Vipera berus) halted its precipitous decline towards extinction and expanded the population dramatically.
Abstract: The negative effects of inbreeding on population size are well documented in captive animals1, but there is surprisingly little evidence that genetic factors cause a decline in wild populations2,3, apart from a reported correlation of low levels of genetic variability with a high incidence of malformed or stillborn offspring4. From the point of view of conservation strategies, it is not only the effect of genetic factors on population decline that needs to be considered, but also whether introducing novel genes can prevent or reverse such a decline. Here we show that the introduction of new genes into a severely inbred and isolated population of adders (Vipera berus) halted its precipitous decline towards extinction and expanded the population dramatically.
562 citations
Authors
Showing all 24120 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Peter J. Barnes | 194 | 1530 | 166618 |
Luigi Ferrucci | 193 | 1601 | 181199 |
Richard H. Friend | 169 | 1182 | 140032 |
Napoleone Ferrara | 167 | 494 | 140647 |
Timothy A. Springer | 167 | 669 | 122421 |
Anders Björklund | 165 | 769 | 84268 |
Hua Zhang | 163 | 1503 | 116769 |
Kaj Blennow | 160 | 1845 | 116237 |
Leif Groop | 158 | 919 | 136056 |
Tomas Hökfelt | 158 | 1033 | 95979 |
Johan G. Eriksson | 156 | 1257 | 123325 |
Naveed Sattar | 155 | 1326 | 116368 |
Paul Elliott | 153 | 773 | 103839 |
Claude Bouchard | 153 | 1076 | 115307 |
Hakon Hakonarson | 152 | 968 | 101604 |