Institution
University of Central Lancashire
Education•Preston, Lancashire, United Kingdom•
About: University of Central Lancashire is a education organization based out in Preston, Lancashire, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 4247 authors who have published 12013 publications receiving 315756 citations.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Galaxy, Stars, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Leipzig University1, University of Belgrade2, Leiden University3, Uppsala University4, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia5, University of Barcelona6, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy7, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens8, François Rabelais University9, Royal Melbourne Hospital10, University of Melbourne11, University of Lisbon12, University of Birmingham13, University of Groningen14, University Medical Center Groningen15, University of Central Lancashire16
TL;DR: The content of these European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Guidelines has been published for personal and educational use only and no commercial use is authorized.
Abstract: Supplementary Table 9, column 'Edoxaban', row 'eGFR category', '95 mL/min' (page 15). The cell should be coloured green instead of yellow. It should also read "60 mg"instead of "60 mg (use with caution in 'supranormal' renal function)."In the above-indicated cell, a footnote has also been added to state: "Edoxaban should be used in patients with high creatinine clearance only after a careful evaluation of the individual thromboembolic and bleeding risk."Supplementary Table 9, column 'Edoxaban', row 'Dose reduction in selected patients' (page 16). The cell should read "Edoxaban 60 mg reduced to 30 mg once daily if any of the following: creatinine clearance 15-50 mL/min, body weight <60 kg, concomitant use of dronedarone, erythromycin, ciclosporine or ketokonazole"instead of "Edoxaban 60 mg reduced to 30 mg once daily, and edoxaban 30 mg reduced to 15mg once daily, if any of the following: creatinine clearance of 30-50 mL/min, body weight <60 kg, concomitant us of verapamil or quinidine or dronedarone."
4,285 citations
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TL;DR: The findings partially support previous claims that different methods of measurement produce conflicting results, but there was also evidence that the sample was an important moderator of effect size.
Abstract: Meta-analyses of sex differences in physical aggression to heterosexual partners and in its physical consequences are reported. Women were slightly more likely (d = -.05) than men to use one or more act of physical aggression and to use such acts more frequently. Men were more likely (d =. 15) to inflict an injury, and overall, 62% of those injured by a partner were women. The findings partially support previous claims that different methods of measurement produce conflicting results, but there was also evidence that the sample was an important moderator of effect size. Continuous models showed that younger aged dating samples and a lower proportion of physically aggressive males predicted effect sizes in the female direction. Analyses were limited by the available database, which is biased toward young dating samples in the United States. Wider variations are discussed in terms of two conflicting norms about physical aggression to partners that operate to different degrees in different cultures.
2,331 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, meta-analytic reviews of sex differences in aggression from real-world settings are described, covering self-reports, observations, peer reports, and teacher reports of overall direct, physical, and indirect aggression.
Abstract: Meta-analytic reviews of sex differences in aggression from real-world settings are described. They cover self-reports, observations, peer reports, and teacher reports of overall direct, physical, ...
1,621 citations
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TL;DR: This review covers recent advances in the development of SPions together with their possibilities and limitations from fabrication to application in drug delivery and the state-of-the-art synthetic routes and surface modification of desired SPIONs for drug delivery purposes.
1,557 citations
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University of Liège1, University of Cambridge2, University of Bern3, University of Washington4, California Institute of Technology5, Massachusetts Institute of Technology6, Université de Namur7, Centre national de la recherche scientifique8, University of Paris9, Cadi Ayyad University10, University of California, San Diego11, University of Leicester12, Liverpool John Moores University13, University of Central Lancashire14, King Abdulaziz University15
TL;DR: The observations reveal that at least seven planets with sizes and masses similar to those of Earth revolve around TRAPPIST-1, and the six inner planets form a near-resonant chain, such that their orbital periods are near-ratios of small integers.
Abstract: One aim of modern astronomy is to detect temperate, Earth-like exoplanets that are well suited for atmospheric characterization. Recently, three Earth-sized planets were detected that transit (that is, pass in front of) a star with a mass just eight per cent that of the Sun, located 12 parsecs away. The transiting configuration of these planets, combined with the Jupiter-like size of their host star—named TRAPPIST-1—makes possible in-depth studies of their atmospheric properties with present-day and future astronomical facilities. Here we report the results of a photometric monitoring campaign of that star from the ground and space. Our observations reveal that at least seven planets with sizes and masses similar to those of Earth revolve around TRAPPIST-1. The six inner planets form a near-resonant chain, such that their orbital periods (1.51, 2.42, 4.04, 6.06, 9.1 and 12.35 days) are near-ratios of small integers. This architecture suggests that the planets formed farther from the star and migrated inwards. Moreover, the seven planets have equilibrium temperatures low enough to make possible the presence of liquid water on their surfaces.
1,476 citations
Authors
Showing all 4321 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Paul M. Thompson | 183 | 2271 | 146736 |
Rob Ivison | 166 | 1161 | 102314 |
Shrinivas R. Kulkarni | 132 | 978 | 72490 |
James Dunlop | 132 | 701 | 68131 |
Mark Sullivan | 126 | 802 | 63916 |
Richard E. Tremblay | 116 | 685 | 45844 |
David I. Perrett | 110 | 350 | 45878 |
Tim J Peters | 106 | 1037 | 47394 |
Francis Martin | 98 | 733 | 43991 |
Brad K. Gibson | 94 | 564 | 38959 |
Lung-Yih Chiang | 93 | 170 | 38604 |
Louise Ryan | 88 | 492 | 26849 |
Jamie Stevens | 87 | 377 | 30896 |
Walter Kieran Gear | 82 | 320 | 30230 |
Derek Ward-Thompson | 79 | 454 | 26600 |