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Institution

University of Salford

EducationSalford, Manchester, United Kingdom
About: University of Salford is a education organization based out in Salford, Manchester, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 13049 authors who have published 22957 publications receiving 537330 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Salford Manchester & The University of Salford Manchester.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
03 Jun 2020-Parasite
TL;DR: The main achievements of this process were an update of the current nomenclature of Echinococcus spp, and an agreement on a standardized description of the surgical operations for CE according to the “Approach, cyst Opening, Resection, and Completeness” framework.
Abstract: Echinococcoses require the involvement of specialists from nearly all disciplines; standardization of the terminology used in the field is thus crucial. To harmonize echinococcosis terminology on sound scientific and linguistic grounds, the World Association of Echinococcosis launched a Formal Consensus process. Under the coordination of a Steering and Writing Group (SWG), a Consultation and Rating Group (CRG) had the main missions of (1) providing input on the list of terms drafted by the SWG, taking into account the available literature and the participants' experience; and (2) providing independent rating on all debated terms submitted to vote. The mission of the Reading and Review Group (RRG) was to give an opinion about the recommendation paper in terms of readability, acceptability and applicability. The main achievements of this process were: (1) an update of the current nomenclature of Echinococcus spp.; (2) an agreement on three names of diseases due to Echinococcus spp.: Cystic Echinococcosis (CE), Alveolar Echinococcosis (AE) and Neotropical Echinococcosis (NE), and the exclusion of all other names; (3) an agreement on the restricted use of the adjective "hydatid" to refer to the cyst and fluid due to E. granulosus sensu lato; and (4) an agreement on a standardized description of the surgical operations for CE, according to the "Approach, cyst Opening, Resection, and Completeness" (AORC) framework. In addition, 95 "approved" and 60 "rejected" terms were listed. The recommendations provided in this paper will be applicable to scientific publications in English and communication with professionals. They will be used for translation into other languages spoken in endemic countries.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first time the condition monitoring decision process has been modelled for real plant based upon filtering theory and the model fits the data well, gives a sensible answer to the actual problem, and is transferable to other condition monitoring contexts.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an explanation for cavity formation in dilute solutions of alkali metals in ammonia electrons is proposed, and the metal-non-metal transition in vanadium oxides and doped semiconductors is discussed.
Abstract: In dilute solutions of alkali metals in ammonia electrons are localized in cavities in the solvent, and thermodynamic and transport properties are very similar to those found for dilute solutions of strong electrolytes. At higher concentrations the properties deviate markedly from those of electrolyte solutions and approach those of a liquid metal. In this paper we propose an explanation for cavity formation, and discuss the metal-non-metal transition in the light of recent information about the transition in vanadium oxides and doped semiconductors.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, Doppler lidar observations of turbulence profiles in the centre of London, UK, as part of the second REPARTEE campaign in autumn 2007 were reported.
Abstract: . Urban boundary layers (UBLs) can be highly complex due to the heterogeneous roughness and heating of the surface, particularly at night. Due to a general lack of observations, it is not clear whether canonical models of boundary layer mixing are appropriate in modelling air quality in urban areas. This paper reports Doppler lidar observations of turbulence profiles in the centre of London, UK, as part of the second REPARTEE campaign in autumn 2007. Lidar-measured standard deviation of vertical velocity averaged over 30 min intervals generally compared well with in situ sonic anemometer measurements at 190 m on the BT telecommunications Tower. During calm, nocturnal periods, the lidar underestimated turbulent mixing due mainly to limited sampling rate. Mixing height derived from the turbulence, and aerosol layer height from the backscatter profiles, showed similar diurnal cycles ranging from c. 300 to 800 m, increasing to c. 200 to 850 m under clear skies. The aerosol layer height was sometimes significantly different to the mixing height, particularly at night under clear skies. For convective and neutral cases, the scaled turbulence profiles resembled canonical results; this was less clear for the stable case. Lidar observations clearly showed enhanced mixing beneath stratocumulus clouds reaching down on occasion to approximately half daytime boundary layer depth. On one occasion the nocturnal turbulent structure was consistent with a nocturnal jet, suggesting a stable layer. Given the general agreement between observations and canonical turbulence profiles, mixing timescales were calculated for passive scalars released at street level to reach the BT Tower using existing models of turbulent mixing. It was estimated to take c. 10 min to diffuse up to 190 m, rising to between 20 and 50 min at night, depending on stability. Determination of mixing timescales is important when comparing to physico-chemical processes acting on pollutant species measured simultaneously at both the ground and at the BT Tower during the campaign. From the 3 week autumnal data-set there is evidence for occasional stable layers in central London, effectively decoupling surface emissions from air aloft.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, exact dispersion relations for transverse magnetic polarized guided waves at an interface between either a linear dielectric or a metal and a nonlinear dielectrics were derived.
Abstract: We derive exact dispersion relations for transverse magnetic polarized guided waves at an interface between either a linear dielectric or a metal and a nonlinear dielectric. The nonlinearity is taken to be a Kerr-type nonlinearity. Numerical results are presented for the dielectric–metal case.

140 citations


Authors

Showing all 13134 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Hongjie Dai197570182579
Michael P. Lisanti15163185150
Matthew Jones125116196909
David W. Denning11373666604
Wayne Hall111126075606
Richard Gray10980878580
Christopher E.M. Griffiths10867147675
Thomas P. Davis10772441495
Nicholas Tarrier9232625881
David M. A. Mann8833843292
Ajith Abraham86111331834
Federica Sotgia8524728751
Mike Hulme8430035436
Robert N. Foley8426031580
Richard Baker8351422970
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202331
2022139
2021880
2020888
2019842
2018781