Institution
University of Salford
Education•Salford, Manchester, United Kingdom•
About: University of Salford is a(n) education organization based out in Salford, Manchester, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topic(s): Population & Thin film. The organization has 13049 authors who have published 22957 publication(s) receiving 537330 citation(s). The organization is also known as: University of Salford Manchester & The University of Salford Manchester.
Topics: Population, Thin film, Health care, Poison control, Sputtering
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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University of Vermont1, University of Minnesota2, University of Texas at Austin3, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology4, Osaka University5, University of Queensland6, Griffith University7, University of Illinois at Chicago8, IBM9, Nanjing University10, Imperial College London11, University of Salford12
TL;DR: This paper presents the top 10 data mining algorithms identified by the IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM) in December 2006: C4.5, k-Means, SVM, Apriori, EM, PageRank, AdaBoost, kNN, Naive Bayes, and CART.
Abstract: This paper presents the top 10 data mining algorithms identified by the IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM) in December 2006: C4.5, k-Means, SVM, Apriori, EM, PageRank, AdaBoost, kNN, Naive Bayes, and CART. These top 10 algorithms are among the most influential data mining algorithms in the research community. With each algorithm, we provide a description of the algorithm, discuss the impact of the algorithm, and review current and further research on the algorithm. These 10 algorithms cover classification, clustering, statistical learning, association analysis, and link mining, which are all among the most important topics in data mining research and development.
4,268 citations
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TL;DR: Few review types possess prescribed and explicit methodologies and many fall short of being mutually exclusive, but this typology provides a valuable reference point for those commissioning, conducting, supporting or interpreting reviews, both within health information and the wider health care domain.
Abstract: Background and objectives : The expansion of evidence-based practice across sectors has lead to an increasing variety of review types. However, the diversity of terminology used means that the full potential of these review types may be lost amongst a confusion of indistinct and misapplied terms. The objective of this study is to provide descriptive insight into the most common types of reviews, with illustrative examples from health and health information domains. Methods : Following scoping searches, an examination was made of the vocabulary associated with the literature of review and synthesis (literary warrant). A simple analytical framework—Search, AppraisaL, Synthesis and Analysis (SALSA)—was used to examine the main review types. Results : Fourteen review types and associated methodologies were analysed against the SALSA framework, illustrating the inputs and processes of each review type. A description of the key characteristics is given, together with perceived strengths and weaknesses. A limited number of review types are currently utilized within the health information domain. Conclusions : Few review types possess prescribed and explicit methodologies and many fall short of being mutually exclusive. Notwithstanding such limitations, this typology provides a valuable reference point for those commissioning, conducting, supporting or interpreting reviews, both within health information and the wider health care domain.
3,774 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) was developed, based on theories of fear and avoidance behaviour and focussed specifically on patients' beliefs about how physical activity and work affected their low back pain.
Abstract: Pilot studies and a literature review suggested that fear-avoidance beliefs about physical activity and work might form specific cognitions intervening between low back pain and disability. A Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) was developed, based on theories of fear and avoidance behaviour and focussed specifically on patients' beliefs about how physical activity and work affected their low back pain. Test-retest reproducibility in 26 patients was high. Principal-components analysis of the questionnaire in 210 patients identified 2 factors: fear-avoidance beliefs about work and fear-avoidance beliefs about physical activity with internal consistency (alpha) of 0.88 and 0.77 and accounting for 43.7% and 16.5% of the total variance, respectively. Regression analysis in 184 patients showed that fear-avoidance beliefs about work accounted for 23% of the variance of disability in activities of daily living and 26% of the variance of work loss, even after allowing for severity of pain; fear-avoidance beliefs about physical activity explained an additional 9% of the variance of disability. These results confirm the importance of fear-avoidance beliefs and demonstrate that specific fear-avoidance beliefs about work are strongly related to work loss due to low back pain. These findings are incorporated into a biopsychosocial model of the cognitive, affective and behavioural influences in low back pain and disability. It is recommended that fear-avoidance beliefs should be considered in the medical management of low back pain and disability.
2,413 citations
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TL;DR: The nature and basis of nonresponsive celiac sprue require more thoughtful initiatives to elucidate the immunologic mechanism(s) of unresponsiveness and evaluate possible means of reversal.
Abstract: This article examines associations between gluten, polymorphisms of the major histocompatibility complex, and mucosal pathology representative of the spectrum of gluten sensitivity Sequences of wheat, rye, and barley prolamins contain recurring tetrapeptide motifs that are predicted to have β-reverse-turn secondary structure and that, with in vitro assays, appear active Structural polymorphisms of major histocompatibility complex subloci identify codon switches within the second exon that control the third hypervariable region in the outer domain of the β chain Observations of the intestinal response to gluten reveal five interrelated lesions (preinfiltrative, infiltrative, hyperplastic, destructive, and hypoplastic) that are interpretable as cell-mediated immunologic responses These responses originate in the lamina propria, where a series of antigen-specific inflammatory processes has now been identified There is no evidence that celiac sprue is a disease of jejunal enterocytes Furthermore, the role of intraepithelial space lymphocytes in pathogenesis, if relevant, needs further experimental dissection Also awaiting further definition are polymorphisms of the celiac lymphocyte antigen receptor and their relationship to gliadin oligopeptide(s) and predisposing genes The nature and basis of nonresponsive celiac sprue require more thoughtful initiatives to elucidate the immunologic mechanism(s) of unresponsiveness and evaluate possible means of reversal Finally, a more sensible definition of gluten sensitivity (unhampered by qualitative morphological imagery) is ultimately called for in order to accommodate the biomolecular advances addressed in this review
2,028 citations
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TL;DR: The findings of this international multicentre study have implications for studies of the causes of cognitive decline and, in clinical practice, for the information given to patients before surgery.
Abstract: Summary Background Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction may occur in the elderly. Age may be a risk factor and hypoxaemia and arterial hypotension causative factors. We investigated these hypotheses in an international multicentre study. Methods 1218 patients aged at least 60 years completed neuropsychological tests before and 1 week and 3 months after major non-cardiac surgery. We measured oxygen saturation by continuous pulse oximetry before surgery and throughout the day of and the first 3 nights after surgery. We recorded blood pressure every 3 min by oscillometry during the operation and every 15‐30 min for the rest of that day and night. We identified postoperative cognitive dysfunction with neuropsychological tests compared with controls recruited from the UK (n=176) and the same countries as study centres (n=145). Findings Postoperative cognitive dysfunction was present in 266 (25·8% [95% CI 23·1‐28·5]) of patients 1 week after surgery and in 94 (9·9% [8·1‐12·0]) 3 months after surgery, compared with 3·4% and 2·8%, respectively, of UK controls (p<0·0001 and p=0·0037, respectively). Increasing age and duration of anaesthesia, little education, a second operation, postoperative infections, and respiratory complications were risk factors for early postoperative cognitive dysfunction, but only age was a risk factor for late postoperative cognitive dysfunction. Hypoxaemia and hypotension were not significant risk factors at any time.
1,850 citations
Authors
Showing all 13049 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hongjie Dai | 197 | 570 | 182579 |
Michael P. Lisanti | 151 | 631 | 85150 |
Matthew Jones | 125 | 1161 | 96909 |
David W. Denning | 113 | 736 | 66604 |
Wayne Hall | 111 | 1260 | 75606 |
Richard Gray | 109 | 808 | 78580 |
Christopher E.M. Griffiths | 108 | 671 | 47675 |
Thomas P. Davis | 107 | 724 | 41495 |
Nicholas Tarrier | 92 | 326 | 25881 |
David M. A. Mann | 88 | 338 | 43292 |
Ajith Abraham | 86 | 1113 | 31834 |
Federica Sotgia | 85 | 247 | 28751 |
Mike Hulme | 84 | 300 | 35436 |
Robert N. Foley | 84 | 260 | 31580 |
Richard Baker | 83 | 514 | 22970 |