Institution
University of Wollongong
Education•Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia•
About: University of Wollongong is a education organization based out in Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Graphene. The organization has 15674 authors who have published 46658 publications receiving 1197471 citations. The organization is also known as: UOW & Wollongong University.
Topics: Population, Graphene, Mental health, Anode, Lithium
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The present study demonstrated that the development of high fat diet-induced obesity in C57 B1/6J mice could be divided into three stages: an early stage in response to high-fat diet that mice were sensitive to exogenous leptin; a reduced food intake stage when mice had an increase in leptin production and still retained central leptin sensitivity; and an increasedFood intake stage, accompanied by a reduction of central leptinensitivity.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the development of high fat diet-induced obesity and leptin resistance. DESIGN: Two experiments were carried out in this study. Firstly, we fed the mice with a high- or low-fat diet for up to 19 weeks to examine a progressive development of high fat diet-induced obesity. Secondly, we examined peripheral and central exogenous leptin sensitivity in mice fed high- or low-fat diets for 1, 8 or 19 weeks. SUBJECTS: A total of 168 C57BL/6J mice (3 weeks old) were used in this study. MEASUREMENTS: In the first experiment, we measured the body weight, energy intake, adipose tissue mass, tibia bone length, and plasma leptin in mice fed either a high- or low-fat diet for 1, 8, 15 and 19 weeks. In the second experiment, body weight change and cumulative energy intake were measured at 6 h intervals for 72 h after leptin injection in mice fed a high- or low-fat diet for 1, 8 or 19 weeks. RESULTS: The results from the first experiment suggested that the development of high fat diet-induced obesity in mice could be divided into early, middle and late stages. Compared with the mice fed a low-fat diet, the mice fed a high-fat diet showed a gradually increased body weight (+5.2%), fat storage (epididymal plus perirenal; +6.7%) and plasma leptin (+18%) at 1 week; +11.4%, +68.1%, and +223%, respectively, at 8 weeks; and +30.5%, +141%, and +458%, respectively, at 19 weeks. Energy intake of high fat diet-fed mice was equal to that of low fat diet-fed controls for the first 3 weeks; it fell below control levels over the next 5 week period, but began to increase gradually after 8 weeks of high-fat diet feeding and then increased dramatically from 15 weeks to be 14% higher than that of controls after 19 weeks. The results from our second experiment showed that: (1) after 1 week of feeding, the mice fed a high-fat diet were sensitive to a 2 μg/g (body weight) intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of leptin, with no differences in body weight change or cumulative energy intake post-injection; (2) after 8 weeks of feeding, the mice fed a high-fat diet were insensitive to 2 μg/g (body weight) i.p. leptin, but were sensitive to a 0.1 μg intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of leptin; (3) after 19 weeks of feeding, the mice fed a high-fat diet were insensitive to 0.1 μg i.c.v. leptin, but were sensitive to a high dose of 2 μg i.c.v. leptin. CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrated that the development of high fat diet-induced obesity (19 weeks) in C57 B1/6J mice could be divided into three stages: (1) an early stage in response to high-fat diet that mice were sensitive to exogenous leptin; (2) a reduced food intake stage when mice had an increase in leptin production and still retained central leptin sensitivity; and (3) an increased food intake stage, accompanied by a reduction of central leptin sensitivity.
571 citations
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TL;DR: For the first time, specific loci that distinguish between BD and SCZ are discovered and polygenic components underlying multiple symptom dimensions are identified that point to the utility of genetics to inform symptomology and potential treatment.
569 citations
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TL;DR: The first report on a SnS@graphene architecture for application as a sodium-ion battery anode, which is built from two-dimensional SnS and graphene nanosheets as complementary building blocks, finds the performance was found to be much better than those of most reported anode materials for Na-ion batteries.
Abstract: Structural phase transitions can be used to alter the properties of a material without adding any additional elements and are therefore of significant technological value. It was found that the hexagonal-SnS2 phase can be transformed into the orthorhombic-SnS phase after an annealing step in an argon atmosphere, and the thus transformed SnS shows enhanced sodium-ion storage performance over that of the SnS2, which is attributed to its structural advantages. Here, we provide the first report on a SnS@graphene architecture for application as a sodium-ion battery anode, which is built from two-dimensional SnS and graphene nanosheets as complementary building blocks. The as-prepared SnS@graphene hybrid nanostructured composite delivers an excellent specific capacity of 940 mAh g–1and impressive rate capability of 492 and 308 mAh g–1 after 250 cycles at the current densities of 810 and 7290 mA g–1, respectively. The performance was found to be much better than those of most reported anode materials for Na-ion ...
567 citations
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TL;DR: In this review, the recent research progress of alloy-type anodes and their compounds for sodium storage is summarized and specific efforts to enhance the electrochemical performance of the alloy-based anode materials are discussed, and the challenges and perspectives regarding these anode Materials are proposed.
Abstract: Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) are considered as promising alternatives to lithium-ion batteries owing to the abundant sodium resources. However, the limited energy density, moderate cycling life, and immature manufacture technology of SIBs are the major challenges hindering their practical application. Recently, numerous efforts are devoted to developing novel electrode materials with high specific capacities and long durability. In comparison with carbonaceous materials (e.g., hard carbon), partial Group IVA and VA elements, such as Sn, Sb, and P, possess high theoretical specific capacities for sodium storage based on the alloying reaction mechanism, demonstrating great potential for high-energy SIBs. In this review, the recent research progress of alloy-type anodes and their compounds for sodium storage is summarized. Specific efforts to enhance the electrochemical performance of the alloy-based anode materials are discussed, and the challenges and perspectives regarding these anode materials are proposed.
567 citations
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TL;DR: The General Help-Seeking Questionnaire (GHSQ) as discussed by the authors was developed to assess intentions to seek help from different sources and for different problems using a sample of 218 high school students, and appears to be a flexible measure of help-seeking intentions that can be applied to a range of contexts.
Abstract: Understanding help seeking intentions and behaviour is fundamental to the identification of factors that can be modified to increase engagement in counselling. Despite considerable research on these variables, integrating prior research has been impeded by a lack of consistent and psychometrically sound help-seeking measures. The General Help-Seeking Questionnaire (GHSQ) was developed to assess intentions to seek help from different sources and for different problems. Using a sample of 218 high school students, the GHSQ was found to have satisfactory reliability and validity, and appears to be a flexible measure of help-seeking intentions that can be applied to a range of contexts.
567 citations
Authors
Showing all 15918 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Lei Jiang | 170 | 2244 | 135205 |
Menachem Elimelech | 157 | 547 | 95285 |
Yoshio Bando | 147 | 1234 | 80883 |
Paul Mitchell | 146 | 1378 | 95659 |
Jun Chen | 136 | 1856 | 77368 |
Zhen Li | 127 | 1712 | 71351 |
Neville Owen | 127 | 700 | 74166 |
Chao Zhang | 127 | 3119 | 84711 |
Jay Belsky | 124 | 441 | 55582 |
Shi Xue Dou | 122 | 2028 | 74031 |
Keith A. Johnson | 120 | 798 | 51034 |
William R. Forman | 120 | 800 | 53717 |
Yang Li | 117 | 1319 | 63111 |
Yusuke Yamauchi | 117 | 1000 | 51685 |
Guoxiu Wang | 117 | 654 | 46145 |