Institution
University of South Australia
Education•Adelaide, South Australia, Australia•
About: University of South Australia is a education organization based out in Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 10086 authors who have published 32587 publications receiving 913683 citations. The organization is also known as: The University of South Australia & UniSA.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Health care, Mental health, Adsorption
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a simple, environmentally friendly and cost-effective method has been developed to synthesize silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) using tea leaf extract, and the reaction was carried out for 2h at room temperature.
364 citations
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01 Jan 2005TL;DR: In this introductory chapter, some fundamental concepts of multiobjective optimization are introduced, emphasizing the motivation and advantages of using evolutionary algorithms.
Abstract: Very often real-world applications have several multiple conflicting objectives. Recently there has been a growing interest in evolutionary multiobjective optimization algorithms that combine two major disciplines: evolutionary computation and the theoretical frameworks of multicriteria decision making. In this introductory chapter, some fundamental concepts of multiobjective optimization are introduced, emphasizing the motivation and advantages of using evolutionary algorithms. We then lay out the important contributions of the remaining chapters of this volume.
363 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a survey was conducted with tourists in five South Australian tourism regions that measured respondents’ attitudes towards tourism experiences in South Australia and the results indicated that the combined use of involvement and place attachment is applicable in tourism.
363 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used green tea (GT-Fe) and eucalyptus leaves (EL-Fe extracts, which regarded as cleaner productions can be used for the efficient removal of nitrate.
362 citations
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Shanghai Jiao Tong University1, Broad Institute2, Harvard University3, Karolinska Institutet4, CAS-MPG Partner Institute for Computational Biology5, King's College London6, Fujita Health University7, University of South Australia8, University of Queensland9, Columbia University10, Peking University11, University of Tokyo12, Chonnam National University13, University of Indonesia14, National Taiwan University15, Utrecht University16, Xi'an Jiaotong University17, State University of New York System18, State University of New York Upstate Medical University19, Jinan University20, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai21, University of Western Australia22, Cardiff University23, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill24, Charité25, Jining Medical University26, University of Hong Kong27, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, University of Hong Kong28, Samsung Medical Center29, Illawarra Health & Medical Research Institute30, University of Wollongong31, University of California, San Diego32, Genome Institute of Singapore33, National University of Singapore34
TL;DR: The largest study to date of East Asian participants is reported, identifying 21 genome-wide-significant associations in 19 genetic loci associated with schizophrenia and highlighting the importance of including sufficient samples of major ancestral groups to ensure their generalizability across populations.
Abstract: Schizophrenia is a debilitating psychiatric disorder with approximately 1% lifetime risk globally. Large-scale schizophrenia genetic studies have reported primarily on European ancestry samples, potentially missing important biological insights. Here, we report the largest study to date of East Asian participants (22,778 schizophrenia cases and 35,362 controls), identifying 21 genome-wide-significant associations in 19 genetic loci. Common genetic variants that confer risk for schizophrenia have highly similar effects between East Asian and European ancestries (genetic correlation = 0.98 ± 0.03), indicating that the genetic basis of schizophrenia and its biology are broadly shared across populations. A fixed-effect meta-analysis including individuals from East Asian and European ancestries identified 208 significant associations in 176 genetic loci (53 novel). Trans-ancestry fine-mapping reduced the sets of candidate causal variants in 44 loci. Polygenic risk scores had reduced performance when transferred across ancestries, highlighting the importance of including sufficient samples of major ancestral groups to ensure their generalizability across populations.
362 citations
Authors
Showing all 10298 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Andrew P. McMahon | 162 | 415 | 90650 |
Timothy P. Hughes | 145 | 831 | 91357 |
Jeremy K. Nicholson | 141 | 773 | 80275 |
Peng Shi | 137 | 1371 | 65195 |
Daniel Thomas | 134 | 846 | 84224 |
Jian Li | 133 | 2863 | 87131 |
Matthew Jones | 125 | 1161 | 96909 |
Ulrich S. Schubert | 122 | 2229 | 85604 |
Elaine Holmes | 119 | 560 | 58975 |
Arne Astrup | 114 | 866 | 68877 |
Richard Gray | 109 | 808 | 78580 |
John B. Furness | 103 | 597 | 37668 |
Thomas J. Jentsch | 101 | 238 | 32810 |
Ben W.J. Mol | 101 | 1485 | 47733 |
John C. Lindon | 99 | 488 | 44063 |