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Institution

University of Otago

EducationDunedin, New Zealand
About: University of Otago is a education organization based out in Dunedin, New Zealand. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 21668 authors who have published 53810 publications receiving 1835189 citations. The organization is also known as: Otago University & otago.ac.nz.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Formulation approaches such as the preparation of co-amorphous small-molecule mixtures and the use of mesoporous silicon and silica-based carriers are presented as potential means to increase the stability of amorphous pharmaceuticals.

370 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, changes in instrumentation and data availability have caused time-varying biases in estimates of global and regional average sea surface temperature, and the size of the biases arising from these changes are estimated and their uncertainties evaluated.
Abstract: [1] Changes in instrumentation and data availability have caused time-varying biases in estimates of global and regional average sea surface temperature. The size of the biases arising from these changes are estimated and their uncertainties evaluated. The estimated biases and their associated uncertainties are largest during the period immediately following the Second World War, reflecting the rapid and incompletely documented changes in shipping and data availability at the time. Adjustments have been applied to reduce these effects in gridded data sets of sea surface temperature and the results are presented as a set of interchangeable realizations. Uncertainties of estimated trends in global and regional average sea surface temperature due to bias adjustments since the Second World War are found to be larger than uncertainties arising from the choice of analysis technique, indicating that this is an important source of uncertainty in analyses of historical sea surface temperatures. Despite this, trends over the twentieth century remain qualitatively consistent.

370 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
06 Oct 2005-BMJ
TL;DR: The home safety programme reduced falls and was more cost effective than an exercise programme in this group of elderly people with poor vision and the Otago exercise programme with vitamin D supplementation was not effective in reducing falls or injuries.
Abstract: Objectives To assess the efficacy and cost effectiveness of a home safety programme and a home exercise programme to reduce falls and injuries in older people with low vision. Design Randomised controlled trial. Setting Dunedin and Auckland, New Zealand. Participants 391 women and men aged ≥ 75 with visual acuity of 6/24 or worse who were living in the community; 92% (361 of 391) completed one year of follow-up. Interventions Participants received a home safety assessment and modification programme delivered by an occupational therapist (n = 100), an exercise programme prescribed at home by a physiotherapist plus vitamin D supplementation (n = 97), both interventions (n = 98), or social visits (n = 96). Main outcome measures Numbers of falls and injuries resulting from falls, costs of implementing the home safety programme. Results Fewer falls occurred in the group randomised to the home safety programme but not in the exercise programme (incidence rate ratios 0.59 (95% confidence interval 0.42 to 0.83) and 1.15 (0.82 to 1.61), respectively). However, within the exercise programme, stricter adherence was associated with fewer falls (P = 0.001). A conservative analysis showed neither intervention was effective in reducing injuries from falls. Delivering the home safety programme cost $NZ650 (£234, 344 euros, $US432) (at 2004 prices) per fall prevented. Conclusion The home safety programme reduced falls and was more cost effective than an exercise programme in this group of elderly people with poor vision. The Otago exercise programme with vitamin D supplementation was not effective in reducing falls or injuries in this group, possibly due to low levels of adherence. Trial registration number ISRCTN15342873.

370 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
27 Mar 1999-Langmuir
TL;DR: In this paper, the adsorption of phosphate ions from aqueous solution onto thin films of colloidal TiO2 has been studied for the first time by in situ internal reflection infrared spectroscopy.
Abstract: The adsorption of phosphate ions from aqueous solution onto thin films of colloidal TiO2 has been studied for the first time by in situ internal reflection infrared spectroscopy. Phosphate binds strongly to TiO2, as evidenced by the large changes in the PO stretching band structure in the infrared spectrum of the adsorbed species compared with the solution species. The Langmuir binding constant for phosphate onto TiO2 at pH = 2.3 is (3.8 ± 0.8) × 104 dm3 mol-1, which is similar to the binding constants onto TiO2 for bidentate ligand species such as oxalate and catechol. The strength of the binding is also apparent in the kinetics of adsorption, showing fast adsorption and much slower desorption, as expected for a strongly bound species. The kinetics data at pH = 8.3 have indicated coverage-dependent phosphate adsorption and desorption. Experiments with substituted phosphate species have confirmed the bidentate binding of phosphate to Ti(IV) ions at the TiO2 surface.

369 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that increased background research should be made at all stages of the calibration process to reduce errors wherever possible, from verifying the geochronological data on the fossils to critical reassessment of their phylogenetic position.
Abstract: Although temporal calibration is widely recognized as critical for obtaining accurate divergence-time estimates using molecular dating methods, few studies have evaluated the variation resulting from different calibration strategies. Depending on the information available, researchers have often used primary calibrations from the fossil record or secondary calibrations from previous molecular dating studies. In analyses of flowering plants, primary calibration data can be obtained from macro- and mesofossils (e.g., leaves, flowers, and fruits) or microfossils (e.g., pollen). Fossil data can vary substantially in accuracy and precision, presenting a difficult choice when selecting appropriate calibrations. Here, we test the impact of eight plausible calibration scenarios for Nothofagus (Nothofagaceae, Fagales), a plant genus with a particularly rich and well-studied fossil record. To do so, we reviewed the phylogenetic placement and geochronology of 38 fossil taxa of Nothofagus and other Fagales, and we identified minimum age constraints for up to 18 nodes of the phylogeny of Fagales. Molecular dating analyses were conducted for each scenario using maximum likelihood (RAxML + r8s) and Bayesian (BEAST) approaches on sequence data from six regions of the chloroplast and nuclear genomes. Using either ingroup or outgroup constraints, or both, led to similar age estimates, except near strongly influential calibration nodes. Using "early but risky" fossil constraints in addition to "safe but late" constraints, or using assumptions of vicariance instead of fossil constraints, led to older age estimates. In contrast, using secondary calibration points yielded drastically younger age estimates. This empirical study highlights the critical influence of calibration on molecular dating analyses. Even in a best-case situation, with many thoroughly vetted fossils available, substantial uncertainties can remain in the estimates of divergence times. For example, our estimates for the crown group age of Nothofagus varied from 13 to 113 Ma across our full range of calibration scenarios. We suggest that increased background research should be made at all stages of the calibration process to reduce errors wherever possible, from verifying the geochronological data on the fossils to critical reassessment of their phylogenetic position.

369 citations


Authors

Showing all 21953 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David Miller2032573204840
Terrie E. Moffitt182594150609
Tien Yin Wong1601880131830
Grant W. Montgomery157926108118
Ichiro Kawachi149121690282
David M. Fergusson12747455992
Carlos A. Camargo125128369143
Philip H Butler12597071999
Francis V. Chisari12332254772
Michael P. Murphy12060153338
Guy S. Salvesen11633775598
Mitch Dowsett11447862453
Valerie Beral11447153729
Gordon Dougan11471555037
Christopher A. Hunter11363352559
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023136
2022375
20213,633
20203,482
20192,973
20182,844