Institution
University of Zagreb
Education•Zagreb, Grad Zagreb, Croatia•
About: University of Zagreb is a education organization based out in Zagreb, Grad Zagreb, Croatia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & European union. The organization has 21769 authors who have published 50267 publications receiving 783239 citations. The organization is also known as: Zagreb University & Sveučilište u Zagrebu.
Papers published on a yearly basis
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TL;DR: The following review has been focused on studies of electrospinning process as the most promising fabrication technique for tissue engineering and drug delivery applications.
216 citations
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Boston Children's Hospital1, University of Granada2, Umeå University3, Royal Victoria Infirmary4, University of Zagreb5, University of Bari6, Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital7, Baylor College of Medicine8, University of Copenhagen9, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust10, UCL Institute of Child Health11
TL;DR: The consumption of sugars, particularly sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs; beverages or drinks that contain added caloric sweeteners), in European children and adolescents exceeds current recommendations, which is of concern because there is no nutritional requirement for free sugars, and infants have an innate preference for sweet taste.
Abstract: The consumption of sugars, particularly sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs; beverages or drinks that contain added caloric sweeteners (ie, sucrose, high-fructose corn syrup, fruit juice concentrates), in European children and adolescents exceeds current recommendations. This is of concern because there is no nutritional requirement for free sugars, and infants have an innate preference for sweet taste, which may be modified and reinforced by pre- and postnatal exposures. Sugar-containing beverages/free sugars increase the risk for overweight/obesity and dental caries, can result in poor nutrient supply and reduced dietary diversity, and may be associated with increased risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular risk, and other health effects. The term "free sugars," includes all monosaccharides/disaccharides added to foods/beverages by the manufacturer/cook/consumer, plus sugars naturally present in honey/syrups/unsweetened fruit juices and fruit juice concentrates. Sugar naturally present in intact fruits and lactose in amounts naturally present in human milk or infant formula, cow/goat milk, and unsweetened milk products is not free sugar. Intake of free sugars should be reduced and minimised with a desirable goal of <5% energy intake in children and adolescents aged ≥2 to 18 years. Intake should probably be even lower in infants and toddlers <2 years. Healthy approaches to beverage and dietary consumption should be established in infancy, with the aim of preventing negative health effects in later childhood and adulthood. Sugar should preferably be consumed as part of a main meal and in a natural form as human milk, milk, unsweetened dairy products, and fresh fruits, rather than as SSBs, fruit juices, smoothies, and/or sweetened milk products. Free sugars in liquid form should be replaced by water or unsweetened milk drinks. National Authorities should adopt policies aimed at reducing the intake of free sugars in infants, children and adolescents. This may include education, improved labelling, restriction of advertising, introducing standards for kindergarten and school meals, and fiscal measures, depending on local circumstances.
216 citations
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TL;DR: These findings identify previously uncharacterized PFC and basal ganglia dysconnectivity in OCD and reveal differentially altered GBC in dorsal and ventral striatum.
216 citations
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Bryn Mawr College1, University of Vermont2, University of Helsinki3, University of Zagreb4, University of Southern Denmark5, Columbia University6, Babeș-Bolyai University7, University of Cologne8, Ankara University9, Chuo University10, The Chinese University of Hong Kong11, Yonsei University12, University of Adelaide13, Harran University14, Aarhus University Hospital15, Erasmus University Rotterdam16, University of Zurich17, Medical University of Warsaw18, Chinese Academy of Sciences19, Mykolas Romeris University20
TL;DR: Across societies, parents and adolescents tended to rate the same items as low, medium, or high, but within-dyad parent–adolescent item agreement varied widely in every society.
Abstract: We used population sample data from 25 societies to answer the following questions: (a) How consistently across societies do adolescents report more problems than their parents report about them? (b) Do levels of parent-adolescent agreement vary among societies for different kinds of problems? (c) How well do parents and adolescents in different societies agree on problem item ratings? (d) How much do parent-adolescent dyads within each society vary in agreement on item ratings? (e) How well do parent-adolescent dyads within each society agree on the adolescent's deviance status? We used five methods to test cross-informant agreement for ratings obtained from 27,861 adolescents ages 11 to 18 and their parents. Youth Self-Report (YSR) mean scores were significantly higher than Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) mean scores for all problem scales in almost all societies, but the magnitude of the YSR-CBCL discrepancy varied across societies. Cross-informant correlations for problem scale scores varied more across societies than across types of problems. Across societies, parents and adolescents tended to rate the same items as low, medium, or high, but within-dyad parent-adolescent item agreement varied widely in every society. In all societies, both parental noncorroboration of self-reported deviance and adolescent noncorroboration of parent-reported deviance were common. Results indicated many multicultural consistencies but also some important differences in parent-adolescent cross-informant agreement. Our findings provide valuable normative baselines against which to compare multicultural findings for clinical samples.
216 citations
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TL;DR: The central part of the Dinarides shows a consistent pattern in the distribution of the large tectonostratigraphic units from southwest (Apulia) to northeast, from which the following five main units originating in different parts of the Mesozoic Tethys, can be distinguished: (1) Adriatic-Dinaridic carbonate platform formations; (2) carbonate-clastic units (`flysch bosniaque') of the passive continental margin; (3) ophiolite-bearing formations, also containing radiolarites, grey
216 citations
Authors
Showing all 22096 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Harry Campbell | 150 | 897 | 115457 |
Joseph R. Ecker | 148 | 381 | 94860 |
Igor Rudan | 142 | 658 | 103659 |
Nikola Godinovic | 138 | 1469 | 100018 |
Ivica Puljak | 134 | 1436 | 97548 |
Damir Lelas | 133 | 1354 | 93354 |
Željko Ivezić | 129 | 344 | 84365 |
Piotr Ponikowski | 120 | 762 | 131682 |
Marin Soljacic | 117 | 764 | 51444 |
Ivan Dikic | 107 | 359 | 52088 |
Ozren Polasek | 102 | 436 | 52674 |
Mordechai Segev | 99 | 729 | 40073 |
Srdan Verstovsek | 96 | 1045 | 38936 |
Segev BenZvi | 95 | 482 | 32127 |
Mirko Planinic | 94 | 467 | 31957 |