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Institution

University of Saskatchewan

EducationSaskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
About: University of Saskatchewan is a education organization based out in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 25021 authors who have published 52579 publications receiving 1483049 citations. The organization is also known as: USask.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the Prairie Blowing Snow Model (PBSM) was used to describe snow transport on fields in a Canadian Prairie environment, and the results showed that the annual proportion of snow transported above any specific height increases notably with mean seasonal wind speed.

297 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Home visitation by paraprofessionals is an intervention that holds promise for socially high-risk families with young children and Initiating the intervention prenatally and increasing the number of visits improves development and health outcomes for particular groups of children.
Abstract: Background: The effectiveness of paraprofessional home-visitations on improving the circumstances of disadvantaged families is unclear. The purpose of this paper is to systematically review the effectiveness of paraprofessional home-visiting programs on developmental and health outcomes of young children from disadvantaged families. Methods: A comprehensive search of electronic databases (e.g., CINAHL PLUS, Cochrane, EMBASE, MEDLINE) from 1990 through May 2012 was supplemented by reference lists to search for relevant studies. Through the use of reliable tools, studies were assessed in duplicate. English language studies of paraprofessional home-visiting programs assessing specific outcomes for children (0-6 years) from disadvantaged families were eligible for inclusion in the review. Data extraction included the characteristics of the participants, intervention, outcomes and quality of the studies. Results: Studies that scored 13 or greater out of a total of 15 on the validity tool (n= 21) are the focus of this review. All studies are randomized controlled trials and most were conducted in the United States. Significant improvements to the development and health of young children as a result of a home-visiting program are noted for particular groups. These include: (a) prevention of child abuse in some cases, particularly when the intervention is initiated prenatally; (b) developmental benefits in relation to cognition and problem behaviours, and less consistently with language skills; and (c) reduced incidence of low birth weights and health problems in older children, and increased incidence of appropriate weight gain in early childhood. However, overall home-visiting programs are limited in improving the lives of socially high-risk children who live in disadvantaged families. Conclusions: Home visitation by paraprofessionals is an intervention that holds promise for socially high-risk families with young children. Initiating the intervention prenatally and increasing the number of visits improves development and health outcomes for particular groups of children. Future studies should consider what dose of the intervention is most beneficial and address retention issues.

297 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the enormous morphological, taxonomical and functional diversity of soil protists is provided, and current challenges and opportunities in soil protistology are discussed.
Abstract: Protists include all eukaryotes except plants, fungi and animals. They are an essential, yet often forgotten, component of the soil microbiome. Method developments have now furthered our understanding of the real taxonomic and functional diversity of soil protists. They occupy key roles in microbial foodwebs as consumers of bacteria, fungi and other small eukaryotes. As parasites of plants, animals and even of larger protists, they regulate populations and shape communities. Pathogenic forms play a major role in public health issues as human parasites, or act as agricultural pests. Predatory soil protists release nutrients enhancing plant growth. Soil protists are of key importance for our understanding of eukaryotic evolution and microbial biogeography. Soil protists are also useful in applied research as bioindicators of soil quality, as models in ecotoxicology and as potential biofertilizers and biocontrol agents. In this review, we provide an overview of the enormous morphological, taxonomical and functional diversity of soil protists, and discuss current challenges and opportunities in soil protistology. Research in soil biology would clearly benefit from incorporating more protistology alongside the study of bacteria, fungi and animals.

297 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An algorithm for measuring frequency at a power system bus is presented and the effects of key parameters, that affect the performance of the algorithm, are discussed.
Abstract: An algorithm for measuring frequency at a power system bus is presented in this paper. The algorithm is based am the least error squares curve fitting technique and uses digitized samples of voltage at a relay locaticn. Mathematical developnent of the algorithm is presented and the effects of key parameters, that affect the performance of the algorithm, are discussed. The algorithm was tested using simulated data and data recorded fran a dynamic frequency source. Results of sample tests are also presented in this paper.

297 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The biomineralization of Au nanoparticles in the metallophillic bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 is the result of Au-regulated gene expression leading to the energy-dependent reductive precipitation of toxic Au(III)-complexes.
Abstract: While the role of microorganisms as main drivers of metal mobility and mineral formation under Earth surface conditions is now widely accepted, the formation of secondary gold (Au) is commonly attributed to abiotic processes Here we report that the biomineralization of Au nanoparticles in the metallophillic bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 is the result of Au-regulated gene expression leading to the energy-dependent reductive precipitation of toxic Au(III)-complexes C metallidurans, which forms biofilms on Au grains, rapidly accumulates Au(III)-complexes from solution Bulk and microbeam synchrotron X-ray analyses revealed that cellular Au accumulation is coupled to the formation of Au(I)-S complexes This process promotes Au toxicity and C metallidurans reacts by inducing oxidative stress and metal resistances gene clusters (including a Au-specific operon) to promote cellular defense As a result, Au detoxification is mediated by a combination of efflux, reduction, and possibly methylation of Au-complexes, leading to the formation of Au(I)-C-compounds and nanoparticulate Au0 Similar particles were observed in bacterial biofilms on Au grains, suggesting that bacteria actively contribute to the formation of Au grains in surface environments The recognition of specific genetic responses to Au opens the way for the development of bioexploration and bioprocessing tools

297 citations


Authors

Showing all 25277 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Tomas Hökfelt158103395979
Frederick Wolfe119417101272
Christopher G. Goetz11665159510
John P. Giesy114116262790
Helmut Kettenmann10438040211
Paul M. O'Byrne10460556520
Susan S. Taylor10451842108
Keith A. Hobson10365341300
Mark S. Tremblay10054143843
James F. Fries10036983589
Gordon McKay9766161390
Jonathan D. Adachi9658931641
Wenjun Zhang9697638530
William C. Dement9634043014
Chris Ryan9597134388
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023173
2022350
20213,129
20202,913
20192,665
20182,479