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Institution

University of London

EducationLondon, United Kingdom
About: University of London is a education organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Public health. The organization has 44838 authors who have published 88086 publications receiving 4002499 citations. The organization is also known as: London University & Lond..


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Journal ArticleDOI
10 May 1995-Virology
TL;DR: Comparisons of predicted amino acid sequences allowed the functions of many human herpesvirus-6 encoded proteins to be assigned and showed the closest relationship in overall number and similarity to human cytomegalovirus products, with approximately 67% homologous proteins as compared to the 21% identified in all herpesviruses.

563 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Genetic data provide further evidence for the 'common-disease common-variant' model of CRC predisposition and identify two previously unreported associations.
Abstract: To identify colorectal cancer (CRC) susceptibility alleles, we conducted a genome-wide association study. In phase 1, we genotyped 550,163 tagSNPs in 940 familial colorectal tumor cases (627 CRC, 313 high-risk adenoma) and 965 controls. In phase 2, we genotyped 42,708 selected SNPs in 2,873 CRC cases and 2,871 controls. In phase 3, we evaluated 11 SNPs showing association at P < 10(-4) in a joint analysis of phases 1 and 2 in 4,287 CRC cases and 3,743 controls. Two SNPs were taken forward to phase 4 genotyping (10,731 CRC cases and 10,961 controls from eight centers). In addition to the previously reported 8q24, 15q13 and 18q21 CRC risk loci, we identified two previously unreported associations: rs10795668, located at 10p14 (P = 2.5 x 10(-13) overall; P = 6.9 x 10(-12) replication), and rs16892766, at 8q23.3 (P = 3.3 x 10(-18) overall; P = 9.6 x 10(-17) replication), which tags a plausible causative gene, EIF3H. These data provide further evidence for the 'common-disease common-variant' model of CRC predisposition.

562 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
02 Jun 2000
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the categories of factors thought to have an impact on presence and present an overview of various approaches taken to measuring presence, which can be divided into two general categories: subjective measures and objective corroborative measures.
Abstract: The concept of presence, i.e. the sensation of 'being there' in a mediated environment, has received substantial attention from the virtual reality community, and is becoming increasingly relevant both to broadcasters and display developers. Although research into presence is still at an early stage of development, there is a consensus that presence has multiple determinants. To identify and test which parameters affect presence, a reliable, robust and valid means of measuring presence is required. In this paper, we describe the categories of factors thought to have an impact on presence. Furthermore, we present an overview of various approaches taken to measuring presence, which can be divided into two general categories: subjective measures and objective corroborative measures. Since presence is a subjective experience, the most direct way of assessment is through users' subjective report. This approach has serious limitations however, and should be used judiciously. Objective measures, such as postural, physiological or social responses to media, can be used to corroborate subjective measures, thereby overcoming some of their limitations. At present, the most promising direction for presence measurement is to develop and use an aggregate measure of presence that is comprised of both subjective and objective components, tailored to the specific medium under study.

562 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this assembled sample of 24-month-old children, the proportion of stunting attributed to or=2% of the time before 24 years was 18%, consistent with the hypothesis that a higher cumulative burden of diarrhoeas increases the risk of Stunting.
Abstract: Diarrhoea is an important cause of death and illness among children in developing countries; however, it remains controversial as to whether diarrhoea leads to stunting. We conducted a pooled analysis of nine studies that collected daily diarrhoea morbidity and longitudinal anthropometry to determine the effects of the longitudinal history of diarrhoea prior to 24 months on stunting at age 24 months. Data covered a 20-year period and five countries. We used logistic regression to model the effect of diarrhoea on stunting. The prevalence of stunting at age 24 months varied by study (range 21-90%), as did the longitudinal history of diarrhoea prior to 24 months (incidence range 3.6-13.4 episodes per child-year, prevalence range 2.4-16.3%). The effect of diarrhoea on stunting, however, was similar across studies. The odds of stunting at age 24 months increased multiplicatively with each diarrhoeal episode and with each day of diarrhoea before 24 months (all P or=5 diarrhoeal episodes before 24 months was 25% (95% CI 8-38%) and that attributed to being ill with diarrhoea for >or=2% of the time before 24 months was 18% (95% CI 1-31%). These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that a higher cumulative burden of diarrhoea increases the risk of stunting.

561 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that possession of linguistic categories facilitates recognition and influences perceptual judgments, but only at the boundaries of existing linguistic categories, and when response bias was controlled, there was no recognition advantage for focal stimuli.
Abstract: The authors sought to replicate and extend the work of E. Rosch Heider (1972) on the Dani with a comparable group from Papua, New Guinea, who speak Berinmo, which has 5 basic color terms. Naming and memory for highly saturated focal, non-focal, and low-saturation stimuli from around the color space were investigated. Recognition of desaturated colors was affected by color vocabulary. When response bias was controlled, there was no recognition advantage for focal stimuli. Paired-associate learning also failed to show an advantage for focal stimuli. Categorical Perception effects for both English and Berinmo were found, but only at the boundaries of existing linguistic categories. It is concluded that possession of linguistic categories facilitates recognition and influences perceptual judgments.

560 citations


Authors

Showing all 44949 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
George Davey Smith2242540248373
Karl J. Friston2171267217169
Nicholas J. Wareham2121657204896
David Miller2032573204840
Raymond J. Dolan196919138540
Peter J. Barnes1941530166618
Michael Marmot1931147170338
Michael Rutter188676151592
Terrie E. Moffitt182594150609
Tony Hunter175593124726
Chris D. Frith173524130472
David Baker1731226109377
Barry Halliwell173662159518
Didier Raoult1733267153016
Feng Zhang1721278181865
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202341
2022240
20214,776
20204,347
20193,581
20183,263