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Institution

University of Portsmouth

EducationPortsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom
About: University of Portsmouth is a education organization based out in Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 5452 authors who have published 14256 publications receiving 424346 citations. The organization is also known as: Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and Art & Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and the Arts.


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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a detailed justification for the deception involved in field experiments in which bogus pairs of transactors test for discrimination by applying for employment or housing, or by trading in product markets.
Abstract: Field experiments in which bogus pairs of transactors test for discrimination by applying for employment or housing, or by trading in product markets, have been widely-published during the last decade. However, no detailed justification has been provided for the deception involved. The general lack of veracity in the market-place, the social harm inflicted by discrimination and the superior accuracy and transparency of this technique justify deceiving the subjects of experiments. Deception of, however, may do them harm, contravenes the ethical standards of psychologists and sociologists and is unnecessary, as alternative procedures are available to deal with 'experimenter effects'.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using techniques from bifurcation theory, recent work looks for a slowing down of the intrinsic transient responses, which is predicted to occur before an instability is encountered, and some encouraging results are already being obtained.
Abstract: There is currently much interest in examining climatic tipping points, to see if it is feasible to predict them in advance. Using techniques from bifurcation theory, recent work looks for a slowing down of the intrinsic transient responses, which is predicted to occur before an instability is encountered. This is done, for example, by determining the short-term autocorrelation coefficient ARC(1) in a sliding window of the time-series: this stability coefficient should increase to unity at tipping. Such studies have been made both on climatic computer models and on real paleoclimate data preceding ancient tipping events. The latter employ reconstituted time-series provided by ice cores, sediments, etc., and seek to establish whether the actual tipping could have been accurately predicted in advance. One such example is the end of the Younger Dryas event, about 11 500 years ago, when the Arctic warmed by 7°C in 50 yrs. A second gives an excellent prediction for the end of "greenhouse" Earth about 34 million years ago when the climate tipped from a tropical state into an icehouse state, using data from tropical Pacific sediment cores. This prediction science is very young, but some encouraging results are already being obtained. Future analyses will clearly need to embrace both real data from improved monitoring instruments, and simulation data generated from increasingly sophisticated predictive models.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The targeted acetylation of histones H3 and H4 at the GAPDH andCA genes is consistent with a role in transcriptional initiation and implies that transcriptional elongation does not necessarily require hyperacetylation.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Studies using infrared, (1)H and (13)C nuclear magnetic resonance, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies and differential scanning calorimetry support the hypothesis that hydrogen bonds, formed between the carboxylic acid functionality of the mucoadhesive material poly(acrylic acid) and the glycoprotein component of mucus, play a significant role in the process of mucocoadhesion.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an integrated framework combining a set of analytical tools within a multi-disciplinary holistic approach was used to identify the biological, economic, and social mechanisms which govern the fishermen's effort allocation between the two targeted stocks.
Abstract: In this paper we analyze the fishing effort allocation of fishermen in the artisanal fisheries of the Turks and Caicos Islands (British West Indies). These fishermen use a free-diving technique to simultaneously exploit the local stocks of queen conch and spiny lobster. Using an integrated framework combining a set of analytical tools within a multi-disciplinary holistic approach, we attempt to identify the biological, economic, and social mechanisms which govern the fishermen's effort allocation between the two targeted stocks. The analysis shows that the seasonal dynamics of the whole system are essentially dictated by the very remunerative lobster fishery. Although this result tends to espouse the predictions of classical economic theory, a closer analysis reveals that the economic rationality approach does not entirely explain the observed fishermen behavior. Information from a series of socio-anthropological surveys shows that the fishermen's decision making is further influenced by collective and individual constraints related to the specific diving abilities required to operate in the two fisheries and by the socio-historico-cultural environment within which the fishing community has been evolving over the last century.

130 citations


Authors

Showing all 5624 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert C. Nichol187851162994
Gavin Davies1592036149835
Daniel Thomas13484684224
Will J. Percival12947387752
Claudia Maraston10336259178
I. W. Harry9831265338
Timothy Clark95113753665
Kevin Schawinski9537630207
Ashley J. Ross9024846395
Josep Call9045134196
David A. Wake8921446124
L. K. Nuttall8925354834
Stephen Neidle8945732417
Andrew Lundgren8824957347
Rita Tojeiro8722943140
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202363
2022282
2021961
2020976
2019905
2018850