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Institution

University of Western Australia

EducationPerth, Western Australia, Australia
About: University of Western Australia is a education organization based out in Perth, Western Australia, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 29613 authors who have published 87405 publications receiving 3064466 citations. The organization is also known as: UWA & University of WA.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
10 Apr 1997-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown that changes in apparent visual direction anticipate saccades and are not of the same size, or even in the same direction, for all parts of the visual field and there is a compression of visual space sufficient to reduce the spacing and even the apparent number of pattern elements.
Abstract: Saccadic eye movements, in which the eye moves rapidly between two resting positions, shift the position of our retinal images. If our perception of the world is to remain stable, the visual directions associated with retinal sites, and others they report to, must be updated to compensate for changes in the point of gaze. It has long been suspected that this compensation is achieved by a uniform shift of coordinates driven by an extra-retinal position signal, although some consider this to be unnecessary. Considerable effort has been devoted to a search for such a signal and to measuring its time course and accuracy. Here, by using multiple as well as single targets under normal viewing conditions, we show that changes in apparent visual direction anticipate saccades and are not of the same size, or even in the same direction, for all parts of the visual field. We also show that there is a compression of visual space sufficient to reduce the spacing and even the apparent number of pattern elements. The results are in part consistent with electrophysiological findings of anticipatory shifts in the receptive fields of neurons in parietal cortex and superior colliculi.

443 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Population strategies addressing the metabolic syndrome should focus on reducing sedentary behaviours such as TV viewing, as well as increasing physical activity, while physical activity was associated with a reduced prevalence.
Abstract: Aims/hypothesis We analysed a sample of Australian adults to determine the strength of associations of TV viewing and participation in physical activity with the metabolic syndrome.

443 citations

01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: Using a sample of Internet users from 38 countries matched against the Internet population of the United States, support is found for support for (1) and (2), suggesting the need for localized privacy policies.
Abstract: We examine three possible explanations for differences in Internet privacy concerns revealed by national regulation: (1) These differences reflect and are related to differences in cultural values described by other research; (2) these differences reflect differences in Internet experience; or (3) they reflect differences in the desires of political institutions without reflecting underlying differences in privacy preferences Using a sample of Internet users from 38 countries matched against the Internet population of the United States, we find support for (1) and (2), suggesting the need for localized privacy policies Privacy concerns decline with Internet experience Controlling for experience, cultural values were associated with differences in privacy concerns These cultural differences are mediated by regulatory differences, although new cultural differences emerge when differences in regulation are harmonized Differences in regulation reflect but also shape country differences Consumers in countries with sectoral regulation have less desire for more privacy regulation

443 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The localisation data in SUBA encompasses 10 distinct subcellular locations, >6743 non-redundant proteins and represents the proteins encoded in the transcripts responsible for 51% of Arabidopsis expressed sequence tags.
Abstract: Knowledge of protein localisation contributes towards our understanding of protein function and of biological inter-relationships. A variety of experimental methods are currently being used to produce localisation data that need to be made accessible in an integrated manner. Chimeric fluorescent fusion proteins have been used to define subcellular localisations with at least 1100 related experiments completed in Arabidopsis. More recently, many studies have employed mass spectrometry to undertake proteomic surveys of subcellular components in Arabidopsis yielding localisation information for approximately 2600 proteins. Further protein localisation information may be obtained from other literature references to analysis of locations (AmiGO: approximately 900 proteins), location information from Swiss-Prot annotations (approximately 2000 proteins); and location inferred from gene descriptions (approximately 2700 proteins). Additionally, an increasing volume of available software provides location prediction information for proteins based on amino acid sequence. We have undertaken to bring these various data sources together to build SUBA, a SUBcellular location database for Arabidopsis proteins. The localisation data in SUBA encompasses 10 distinct subcellular locations, >6743 non-redundant proteins and represents the proteins encoded in the transcripts responsible for 51% of Arabidopsis expressed sequence tags. The SUBA database provides a powerful means by which to assess protein subcellular localisation in Arabidopsis (http://www.suba.bcs.uwa.edu.au).

443 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This data indicates that children with a history of food allergy are more likely to be at risk of developing anaphylactic shock than those who do not have an allergy.
Abstract: Food allergy is a substantial and evolving public health issue, recently emerging over the last 10-15 yr as a 'second wave' of the allergy epidemic. It remains unclear why this new phenomenon has lagged decades behind the 'first wave' of asthma, allergic rhinitis and inhalant sensitization. In regions like Australia, which lead the respiratory epidemic, challenge-proven IgE-mediated food allergy now affects up to 10% of infants. Although their parents were among the first generation to experience the large-scale rise in allergic diseases, disorders of oral tolerance were previously uncommon. Of further concern, this new generation appears less likely to outgrow food allergy than their predecessors with long-term implications for disease burden. Allergic disease has been linked to the modern lifestyle including changing dietary patterns, changing intestinal commensal bacteria and vehicular pollution. It is not yet known whether the rise in food allergy is a harbinger of earlier and more severe effects of these progressive environmental changes or whether additional or unrelated lifestyle factors are implicated. New studies suggest environmental factors can produce epigenetic changes in gene expression and disease risk that may be potentially heritable across generations. The rising rates of maternal allergy, a strong direct determinant of allergic risk, could also be amplifying the effect of environmental changes. Preliminary evidence that non-Caucasian populations may be even more susceptible to the adverse effects of 'westernisation' has substantial global implications with progressive urbanization of the more populous regions in the developing world. Unravelling the environmental drivers is critical to curtail a potential tsunami of allergic disease.

442 citations


Authors

Showing all 29972 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Nicholas G. Martin1921770161952
Cornelia M. van Duijn1831030146009
Kay-Tee Khaw1741389138782
Steven N. Blair165879132929
David W. Bates1591239116698
Mark E. Cooper1581463124887
David Cameron1541586126067
Stephen T. Holgate14287082345
Jeremy K. Nicholson14177380275
Xin Chen1391008113088
Graeme J. Hankey137844143373
David Stuart1361665103759
Joachim Heinrich136130976887
Carlos M. Duarte132117386672
David Smith1292184100917
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023138
2022656
20215,967
20205,589
20195,452
20184,923