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  <title>Official 2013 Collection - UQ eSpace</title>
  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/</link>
  <description>The University of Queensland</description>
  <language>en</language>
  <generator>Fez </generator>
  <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs>
   				  	      
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	  <title>한국어 교과서 다문화 : 초등학교</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:292406</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-02-28T12:57:52Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Lee, Dong-bae
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:292406/UQ292406_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>铬过渡层位置及金属沉积角度对纳米球刻蚀法制备二维银纳米点阵结构的影响</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:272465</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Ag nanoparticles with two-dimensional (2D) array structure are fabricated via nanosphere lithography. The influences of Cr interlayer position and metal deposition direction on array structure are systematically studied. It is found that the structure of the 2D Ag nanoparticle array with Cr interlayer is better than that without interlayers. When the Cr interlayer is deposited on the PS mask, the tips of the acquired triangle nanoparticles are much sharper, and the area of the nanoparticle array is much larger than that in the other case. Moreover, the achieved nanoparticle array has a better uniformity and compactness in structure, and a higher binding ability to the substrate when Cr and Ag deposition direction are perpendicular to the surface of the substrate. Further absorption spectrum experiment proves the improvement of the structure and feature of the 2D Ag nanoparticle array. All these results are very crucial to the future modification and fabrication of biochemical sensors with the 2D Ag nanoparticle array.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-04-09T12:11:01Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Kong, Ling-Qi
				 og 													Zhang, Chun-Jing
				 og 													Huang, Sheng-Li
				 og 													Zhu, Xian-Fang
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:272465/UQ272465_fulltext.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>『のだめカンタービレ』における笑いの要素</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:275140</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>The chapter examines humour in the Japanese contemporary girls’ manga series entitled Nodame Cantabile, using three major theories. First, Honda Masuko’s study of childhood “as another culture” provides useful tools to clarify the childlike qualities of the heroine Nodame and her fellow students and mentors of classical music. Second, the rules and characteristics of the “play” identified by Johan Huizinga in his Homo Ludens are helpful to understand the playfulness as well as the serious and cathartic factors of this manga. Finally, Tsurumi Shunsuke’s theory of Ame no Uzume is used to analyse Nodame as brave cross-cultural performer/trickster. [author-supplied summary]</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-06-01T14:14:33Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Aoyama, Tomoko
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:275140/Meijishoin.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
											<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:275140/UQ275140_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
																	
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	  <title>电子束诱导单壁碳纳米管不稳定的新观察</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:272466</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-04-09T12:11:13Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Li, Lun-Xiong
				 og 													Su, Jiang-Bin
				 og 													Wu, Yu
				 og 													Zhu, Xian-Fang
				 og 													Wang, Zhan-Guo
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:272466/UQ272466_fulltext.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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		  <item>
	  <title>β</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:287158</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-12-12T16:00:44Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Benson, Karen
				 og 													Faff, Robert
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>A Bayesian network approach for selecting translocation sites for endangered island birds</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:286178</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-11-25T00:00:00Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Laws, Rebecca J.
				 og 													Kesler, Dylan C.
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>ABBAS KIAROSTAMI the shock of the real</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:290071</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-01-27T00:35:20Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Butler, Rex
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:290071/UQ290071_fulltext.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>Abdominal binder improves lung volumes and voice in people with tetraplegic spinal cord injury</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:287474</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-12-17T15:59:26Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Wadsworth, Brooke M.
				 og 													Haines, Terry P.
				 og 													Cornwell, Petrea L.
				 og 													Rodwell, Leanne T.
				 og 													Paratz, Jennifer D.
										</author>
						
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	  <title>A behavioural ecology approach to understand volunteer surveying for citizen science datasets</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:287801</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-12-23T00:52:06Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Tulloch, Ayesha I. T.
				 og 													Szabo, Judit K.
										</author>
						
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	  <title>A better coefficient of determination for genetic profile analysis</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:277918</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-07-23T17:09:43Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Lee, Sang Hong
				 og 													Goddard, Michael E.
				 og 													Wray, Naomi R.
				 og 													Visscher, Peter M.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>A bigger picture: classical cadherins and the dynamic actin cytoskeleton</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:283108</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Classical cadherin adhesion receptors influence tissue integrity in health and disease. Their biological function is intimately linked to the actin cytoskeleton. To date, research has largely focused on identifying the molecular mechanisms that physically couple cadherin to cortical actin filaments. However, the junctional cytoskeleton is dynamic. Recent developments in understanding how filament dynamics and organization in the junctional cytoskeleton are controlled provide new insights into how the actin cytoskeleton regulates cadherin junctions in health and disease.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-10-11T00:00:00Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Ratheesh, Aparna
				 og 													Yap, Alpha S.
										</author>
						
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	  <title>Ability as an exclusionary concept in youth sport</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:281577</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>In this chapter I will offer a socially critical explanation of two key ways in which the concept or notion of ability can influence the engagement and progress of children and young people in sport. In the first instance I will focus on the exclusionary consequences of common and prevailing understandings of ability and their notable influence in numerous talent identification processes. Second, I will offer an alternative social construction conception of ability to demonstrate the arbitrary nature of ability and its potential for influencing the inclusion and exclusion of young people in a movement culture such as sport.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-09-08T21:08:14Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Hay, Peter J.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:281577/UQ281577_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>A bioinformatic strategy for the detection, classification and analysis of bacterial autotransporters</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:279312</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-08-24T15:13:43Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Celik, Nermin
				 og 													Webb. Chaukke T.
				 og 													Leyton, Denusse L.
				 og 													Holt, Kathryn E.
				 og 													Heinz, Eva
				 og 													Gorrell, Rebecca
				 og 													Kwok, Terry
				 og 													Naderer, Thomas
				 og 													Strugnell, Richard A.
				 og 													Speed, Terence P.
				 og 													Teasdale, Rohan D.
				 og 													Likic, Valdimir A.
				 og 													Lithgow, Trevor
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>亚磁场及其生物响应机制. A biological perspective of the hypomagnetic field: From definition towards mechanism</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:271991</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-03-31T13:59:22Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													莫炜川 Mo, Wei-chuan
				 og 													刘缨 Liu, Ying
				 og 													赫荣乔 He, Rong-qiao
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:271991/UQ271991.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
											<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:271991/UQ271991_peer_review.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
																	
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	  <title>Abiotic and biotic controls of cryptobenthic fish assemblages across a Caribbean seascape</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:287320</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>The majority of fish studies on coral reefs consider only non-cryptic species and, despite their functional importance, data on cryptic species are scarce. This study investigates inter-habitat variation in Caribbean cryptobenthic fishes by re-analysing a comprehensive data set from 58 rotenone stations around Buck Island, U.S. Virgin Islands. Boosted regression trees were used to associate the density and diversity of non-piscivorous cryptobenthic fishes, both in the entire data set and on reef habitats alone, with 14 abiotic and biotic variables. The study also models the habitat requirements of the three commonest species. Dead coral cover was the first or second most important variable in six of the eight models constructed. For example, within the entire data set, the number of species and total fish density increased approximately linearly with increasing dead coral cover. Dead coral was also important in multivariate analyses that discriminated 10 assemblages within the entire data set. On reef habitats, the number of species and total fish density increased dramatically when dead coral exceeded ~55 %. Live coral cover was typically less important for explaining variance in fish assemblages than dead coral, but live corals were important for maintaining high fish diversity. Coral species favoured by cryptobenthic species may be particularly susceptible to mortality, but dead coral may also provide abundant food and shelter for many fishes. Piscivore density was a key variable in the final models, but typically increased with increasing cryptobenthic fish diversity and abundance, suggesting both groups of fishes are responding to the same habitat variables. The density of territorial damselfishes reduced the number of cryptobenthic fish species on reef habitats. Finally, habitats delineated by standard remote sensing techniques supported distinct cryptobenthic fish assemblages, suggesting that such maps can be used as surrogates of general patterns of cryptic fish biodiversity in conservation planning.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-12-16T00:17:50Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Harborne, A. R.
				 og 													Jelks, H. L.
				 og 													Smith-Vaniz, W. F.
				 og 													Rocha, L. A.
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>A bivalent Neisseria meningitidis recombinant lipidated factor H binding protein vaccine in young adults: results of a randomised, controlled, dose-escalation phase-1 trial</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:284908</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-11-15T11:05:39Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Richmond, P. C.
				 og 													Nissen, M. D.
				 og 													Marshall, H. S.
				 og 													Lambert, S. B.
				 og 													Roberton, D.
				 og 													Gruber, W. C.
				 og 													Jones, T. R.
				 og 													Arora, A.
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>A blended hazard identification methodology to support process diagnosis</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:277906</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A novel hazard identification methodology applied to process systems is presented in this paper. This blended hazard identification (BLHAZID) methodology blends two different types of HAZID methods: the function-driven and component-driven approach. The BLHAZID method is based on a conceptual framework called the Functional Systems Framework, which describes structure-function-goal relationships in process systems.The goals of the BLHAZID methodology are to generate outcomes that contain a high coverage of hazards, describe detailed failure causality in process systems and express this knowledge in a structured form for effective reused in subsequent applications, such as fault diagnosis, operator training, design reviews, fault and event tree construction and hazard updates to satisfy major hazard facility requirements.Both the BLHAZID methodology and the Functional Systems Framework were developed with involvement and advice from two major industrial partners. An industrial case study of a benzene saturation unit is presented to illustrate how the BLHAZID methodology operates in practice.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-07-23T17:07:18Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Seligmann, Benjamin J.
				 og 													Nemeth, Erzsébet
				 og 													Hangos, Katalin M.
				 og 													Cameron, Ian T.
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>A blueprint for staging of murine melanocytic lesions based on the Cdk4 R24C/R24C :: Tyr- NRAS Q 61K model</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:277628</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-07-16T23:21:09Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Wurm, Elisabeth M.T.
				 og 													Lin, Lynlee L.
				 og 													Ferguson, Blake
				 og 													Lambie, Duncan
				 og 													Prow, Tarl W.
				 og 													Walker, Graeme J.
				 og 													Soyer, H. Peter
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:277628/Lambie_affiliation_evidence.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>A bluff body jet mixer simulation with a new developed OpenFOAM based sparse-Lagrangian Multiple Mapping Conditioning model</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:293421</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Turbulence provides effective mixing of entrained fluids to a molecular scale. This has wide-ranging consequences in engineering applications, particularly in turbulent combustion, where there is a diffusive-reactive balance at these smallest, unresolved scales. Probability Density Function methods that were introduced in the 1980s have been shown to give a successful statistic prediction of turbulent mixing and reaction. However, two major issues prevent this advanced method from being widely adopted for engineering applications: the high computational cost which is related to the large number of Pope Particles involved in conventional PDF simulations; and the ongoing need for a robust code that can handle all the modelling problems in engineering applications such as complex geometry and so on. To address the abovementioned problems, a C++ implementation of the efficient sparse-Lagrangian Multiple Mapping Conditioning model based on the popular Computational Fluid Dynamics toolkit OpenFOAM is introduced here. The results for a bluff body jet mixer demonstrate the new open source combustion platform, laying a foundation for connecting the cutting edge turbulence research with real engineering simulations.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-03-11T15:59:30Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Ge, Y.
				 og 													Sundaram, B.
				 og 													Cleary, M. J.
				 og 													Klimenko, A. Y.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:293421/UQ293421_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>Abnormal topological organization of structural brain networks in schizophrenia</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:284894</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Schizophrenia is a debilitating mental disorder characterized by disturbances of thought and emotion as well as neurocognitive deficits. It is hypothesized that the core symptoms of schizophrenia arise from the inability to integrate neural processes segregated across distributed brain regions. Graph theory allows us to verify this hypothesis at large-scale structural network level. In this study, a sample of 101 schizophrenic patients and 101 healthy controls was included. We sought to investigate the abnormality of network topological organization in patients with schizophrenia by using the cortical thickness measurement from magnetic resonance imaging. Brain networks were constructed by thresholding cortical thickness correlation matrices of 78 regions and analyzed using graph theoretical approaches. Compared to healthy controls, patients showed increased characteristic path length and clustering coefficient in the structural cortical networks. Moreover, schizophrenia patients were associated with reduced nodal centrality in several regions of the default network and increased nodal centrality mainly in primary cortex and paralimbic cortex regions. These findings suggest that the structural networks of schizophrenic patients have a less optimal topological organization, resulting in reduced capacity to integrate information across brain regions.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-11-15T11:01:26Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Zhang, Yuanchao
				 og 													Lin, Lei
				 og 													Lin, Ching-Po
				 og 													Zhou, Yuan
				 og 													Chou, Kun-Hsien
				 og 													Lo, Chun-Yi
				 og 													Su, Tung-Ping
				 og 													Jiang, Tianzi
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>Abnormal WT1 expression in human fetuses with bilateral renal agenesis and cardiac malformations</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:269019</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-03-06T08:53:40Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Loo, Christine K.C.
				 og 													Pereira, Tamara N.
				 og 													Ramm, Grant A.
										</author>
						
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	  <title>Aboriginal objections to development and mining activities on the grounds of adverse impacts to sites of spiritual significance: Australian judicial and quasi-judicial responses</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:292880</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>This article considers the ways in which Australia’s courts and tribunals have responded to Aboriginal objections to proposed mining and development activities on the grounds of potential adverse impacts to “sacred sites”. Over the last 15 years of the mining and housing booms, Australia’s courts and tribunals have expanded the grounds on which Aboriginal objections to such activities will be successful, with significant ramifications for the mining and development industries, legal practitioners, urban planners and heritage professionals. This expansion of the grounds for objection reflects an increased awareness on the part of the judiciary and quasi-judiciary of Aboriginal world views and of the forms that the spiritual values of a site can take, augmented by a more flexible application of general urban planning principles. Importantly, the decisions of Australia’s courts and tribunals have provided legal counsel that act for traditional owners, developers and mining concerns with clear guidance in regards to mounting a case for a successful objection or a defence to such objections.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-03-06T10:10:43Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Sneddon, Andrew
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:292880/UQ292880_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>Aboriginal vernacular names of Australian cycads of Macrozamia, Bowenia and Lepidozamia spp.: a response to &#039;Cycads in the vernacular: A compendium of local names&#039;</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:290868</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>In 2007 Bonta and Osborne published &#039;Cycads in the vernacular: A compendium of local names&#039;, in which they concluded that, in contrast to other cycads around the world, very few names and meanings had been documented for Australian Macrozamia species. This paper aims to better document the cycad species utilised by Aboriginal people for the benefit of researchers in diverse disciplines. It draws on information contained in primary sources and many early historic documents to present Aboriginal names and meanings for various species of Bowenia, Lepidozamia and Macrozamia in Australia, to clarify the names of some Australian species, and to provide additional names for species and plant components not included in the compendium. In addition, it compares patterns in the meanings of names in Australia to those used overseas, finding similarities and differences. By providing a more comprehensive synthesis of information on Indigenous names and meanings of these three genera, the paper demonstrates that the gap identified by Bonta and Osborne is more apparent than real, and high-lights the value of cross-disciplinary collaboration in ethnohistorical, ethnobotanical, linguistic, anthropological and archaeological research</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-02-10T00:25:07Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Asmussen, Brit
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:290868/UQ290868_fulltext.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
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	  <title>A boundary focused quadrilateral mesh generation algorithm for multi-material structures</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:287738</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>This paper describes a new boundary focused mesh generation algorithm. The algorithm produces quadrilateral meshes from images of multi-material structures. The challenge of meshing such images is to create high quality elements which are aligned with complex material boundaries. The approach proposed in this paper uses the following steps: (1) extract boundaries according to pixel colours; (2) smooth the jagged boundaries; (3) generate geodesic isolines aligned with smoothed boundaries; (4) generate a mesh from the boundaries and isolines; (5) optimize the mesh using the &quot; Pisces&quot; pattern (which is introduced in this paper). Application examples are presented to contrast the reliability and effectiveness of the new algorithm with existing approaches.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-12-23T00:28:17Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Liu, Yan
				 og 													Xing, H. L.
										</author>
						
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		  <item>
	  <title>Above/belowground feedback may facilitate and sustain mono-dominance on rehabilitated North Stradbroke Island</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:277546</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A requisite corollary of mineral sand mining on North Stradbroake Island (Queensland (Qld), Australia) has been the progressive rehabilitation of post-mined lands for the revegetation of native subtropical Eucalypt communities. Since 2005, rigorous environmental monitoring has been undertaken to verify the annual development of post-rehabilitated sites. From these longterm analyses, a chronosequence of land revegetation (ranging from three to 26 years postrehabilitation) was developed to examine the rehabilitation trajectories of various post-mined sites in relation to proximal undisturbed locations. Here, we identifi ed that some sites may be deviating from the intended natural analogues as evidenced by the opportunistic colonisation and otherwise ‘invasive’ behaviour of a regionally native species (Black Sheoak − Allocasuarina littoralis), which appear to be displacing the intended Eucalypt varieties. Although it is recognised that the broader data trends correspond to distinct periods of adaptive modifi cations to the implementation of rehabilitation (ie pre- and post-1995), this analysis focuses on further identifying potential above- and belowground feedback mechanisms underlying these divergent ecological outcomes.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-07-13T20:42:09Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Audet, P.
				 og 													Gravina, A.
				 og 													Glenn, V.
				 og 													McKenna, P.
				 og 													Vickers, H.
				 og 													Gillespie, M.
				 og 													Mulligan, D.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:277546/UQ277546_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Abrupt increase in east Indonesian rainfall from flooding of the Sunda Shelf ∼9500 years ago</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:296676</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>We present a precisely dated, multi-proxy stalagmite record from Liang Luar Cave, Flores (southeast Indonesia) that reveals a rapid increase in Indonesian monsoon rainfall at ∼9.5 ka. A &quot;ramp-fitting&quot; method for detecting statistically significant inflections in a time-series was applied to the stalagmite δ 18O, Mg/Ca, and Sr/Ca profiles to quantify the precise timing and magnitude of an abrupt increase in monsoon strength over a period of ∼350 years. Previously published lake-level records from the monsoon-affected Australian interior show a sudden intensification of the Australian monsoon at ∼14 ka. However, our records indicate that monsoon intensification in Flores occured ∼4-5 kyr later. The timing of the monsoon shift in Flores is synchronous with the rapid expansion of rainforest in northeast Australia and regional freshening of the southern Makassar Strait which, under present-day conditions, is sensitive to monsoon variability. The freshening of southern Makassar was coeval with an abrupt ∼1.5 °C cooling in the upper thermocline of the Timor Sea ∼9.5 ka, indicative of reduced surface heat transport by the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF) when the Java Sea opened during postglacial sea-level rise. This suggests that the abrupt increase in monsoon rainfall on Flores was not due to a change in the ITF - because a decrease in rainfall would be expected to accompany cooler local sea surface temperatures (SSTs) - but rather by the sudden increase in ocean surface area and/or temperature in the monsoon source region as the Sunda Shelf flooded during deglaciation. We propose that it was the abrupt intensification of the monsoon through the late deglaciation that maintained the subsequent structure of the ITF following the flooding of the Sunda Shelf at ∼9.5 ka.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-04-10T13:40:12Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Griffiths, Michael L.
				 og 													Drysdale, Russell N.
				 og 													Gagan, Michael K.
				 og 													Zhao, Jian-xin
				 og 													Hellstrom, John C.
				 og 													Ayliffe, Linda K.
				 og 													Hantoro, Wahyoe S.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Absent at the creation: Islamism&#039;s belated, troubled engagement with early Indonesian nationalism</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:278970</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-08-16T11:12:13Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Elson, R. E.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:278970/UQ278970_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Absent ductus venosus - outcomes and implications from a tertiary centre</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:278354</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-07-31T02:36:57Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Thomas, Joseph T.
				 og 													Petersen, Scott
				 og 													Cincotta, Robert
				 og 													Lee-Tannock, Alison
				 og 													Gardener, Glenn
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Absolute absorption line-shape measurements at the shot-noise limit</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:285420</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Here, we report a measurement scheme for determining an absorption profile with an accuracy imposed solely by photon shot noise. We demonstrate the power of this technique by measuring the absorption of cesium vapor with an uncertainty at the 2-ppm level. This extremely high signal-to-noise ratio allows us to directly observe the homogeneous line-shape component of the spectral profile, even in the presence of Doppler broadening, by measuring the spectral profile at a frequency detuning more than 200 natural linewidths from the line center. We then use this tool to discover an optically induced broadening process that is quite distinct from the well-known power broadening phenomenon.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-11-15T15:00:33Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Truong, Gar-Wing
				 og 													Anstie, James D.
				 og 													May, Eric F.
				 og 													Stace, Thomas M.
				 og 													Luiten, Andre N.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Absolute configuration and total synthesis of a novel antimalarial lipopeptide by the de novo preparation of chiral nonproteinogenic amino acids</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:275219</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-06-04T12:29:51Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Ghosh, Shibaji K.
				 og 													Somanadhan, Brinda
				 og 													Tan, Kevin S.-W.
				 og 													Butler, Mark S.
				 og 													Lear, Martin J.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Abstract knowledge and reified financial innovation: building wisdom and ethics into financial innovation networks</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:289270</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>This article argues that abstract knowledge in the form of formally developed theory plays an increasingly important role in the economy and in financial innovation in particular. Abstract knowledge is easily reified, and this is an aspect of knowledge work that is insufficiently researched. In this article, we problematize reification of abstract knowledge in financial innovation from wisdom, ethics, and social network analysis perspectives. This article, therefore, considers the composition and structures of financial innovation networks that help avoid reification by building ethicality through social practice wisdom. Finally, we discuss future directions that empirical ethics research can take.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-01-17T14:10:12Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Rooney, David
				 og 													Mandeville, Tom
				 og 													Kastelle, Tim
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Abundance and diversity of Conus species (Gastropoda: Conidae) at the northern tip of New Ireland province of Papua New Guinea</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:286624</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-12-02T00:00:00Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Muttenthaler, Markus
				 og 													Dutertre, Sebastien
				 og 													Wingerd, Joshua S.
				 og 													Aini, John W.
				 og 													Walton, Hugh
				 og 													Alewood, Paul F.
				 og 													Lewis, Richard J.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:286624/UQ286624_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Abyssomicins from the South China Sea deep-sea sediment Verrucosispora sp.: natural thioether michael addition adducts as antitubercular prodrugs</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:292213</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-02-24T01:02:42Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Wang, Qian
				 og 													Song, Fuhang
				 og 													Xiao, Xue
				 og 													Huang, Pei
				 og 													Li, Li
				 og 													Monte, Aaron
				 og 													Abdel-Mageed, Wael M.
				 og 													Wang, Jian
				 og 													Guo, Hui
				 og 													He, Wenni
				 og 													Xie, Feng
				 og 													Dai, Huanqin
				 og 													Liu, Miaomiao
				 og 													Chen, Caixia
				 og 													Xu, Hao
				 og 													Liu, Mei
				 og 													Piggott, Andrew M.
				 og 													Liu, Xueting
				 og 													Capon, Robert J.
				 og 													Zhang, Lixin
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Academic integrity: achieving best practice in built environment degree programs</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:282097</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-09-19T11:46:15Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Warren, Clive M. J.
				 og 													Peterson, Ann
				 og 													Neil, David
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:282097/UQ282097_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Academic integrity: achieving good practice in undergraduate property and planning programs through online tutoring</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:268520</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-02-27T10:53:06Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Warren, Clive M. J.
				 og 													Peterson, Ann
				 og 													Neil, David
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:268520/UQ268520_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Academic integrity and plagiarism: perceptions and experience of staff and students in a school of dentistry: A situational analysis of staff and student perspectives</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:267546</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-02-12T00:19:39Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Ford, P. J.
				 og 													Hughes, C.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>A case of bilateral lower cranial nerve palsies after base of skull trauma With complex management issues case report and review of the literature</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:275276</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-06-05T03:06:33Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Lehn, Alexander Christoph
				 og 													Lettieri, Jennie
				 og 													Grimley, Rohan
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>A case of septic superficial thrombophlebitis of varicose veins associated with Yersinia enterocolitica and Propionibacterium</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:288491</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-01-08T13:13:29Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Ho, K. Kam Fai
				 og 													Al-Timimi, A.
				 og 													Walker, P. J.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:288491/UQ288491_peer_review.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>A case study in model-based testing of specifications and implementations</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:266588</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-02-01T13:33:45Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Miller, Tim
				 og 													Strooper, Paul
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Acceptability and compliance of atenolol tablet, compounded paste and compounded suspension prescribed to healthy cats</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:276979</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>This study was designed to evaluate the cats&#039; acceptance and compliance of the owners and cats towards an extemporaneously prepared palatable compounded atenolol (paste and suspension) formulation in comparison to the commercially obtained tablet, in a randomised, cross-over study design.The three formulations were prescribed twice daily for 6 days to 13 healthy privately-owned cats of 13 different owners, with varying levels of experience in medicating cats. Daily compliance was evaluated via an owner-completed diary, completed after each dose administered. Owner&#039;s experience and preference of the formulation was evaluated via questionnaires given prior to, at the end of each treatment protocol, and upon completion of the study. Although compounded suspension was association with fewest missed doses, the majority of cat owners expressed a preference for the divided tablet. Atenolol tablets, compounded paste and suspension acceptance and compliance were comparable. Further work is now required to assess the amount and stability of the active ingredient and the robustness of the paste and suspension formulations prior to any bioavailability comparisons between the formulations.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-07-06T09:37:58Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Khor, Kuan Hua
				 og 													Campbell, Fiona
				 og 													Rathbone, Michael J.
				 og 													Greer, Ristan M.
				 og 													Mills, Paul C.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Acceptability - A neglected dimension of access to health care: Findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:280997</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-09-02T00:19:50Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Dillip, Angel
				 og 													Alba, Sandra
				 og 													Mshana, Christopher
				 og 													Hetzel, Manuel W.
				 og 													Lengeler, Christian
				 og 													Mayumana, Iddy
				 og 													Schulze, Alexander
				 og 													Mshinda, Hassan
				 og 													Weiss, Mitchell G.
				 og 													Obrist, Brigit
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Acceptance as a Process Variable in Relation to Catastrophizing in Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:288525</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-01-08T15:34:53Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Baranoff, J.
				 og 													Hanrahan, S. J.
				 og 													Kapur, D.
				 og 													Connor, J. P.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Accessing complex crop genomes with next-generation sequencing</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:290902</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Many important crop species have genomes originating from ancestral or recent polyploidisation events. Multiple homoeologous gene copies, chromosomal rearrangements and amplification of repetitive DNA within large and complex crop genomes can considerably complicate genome analysis and gene discovery by conventional, forward genetics approaches. On the other hand, ongoing technological advances in molecular genetics and genomics today offer unprecedented opportunities to analyse and access even more recalcitrant genomes. In this review, we describe next-generation sequencing and data analysis techniques that vastly improve our ability to dissect and mine genomes for causal genes underlying key traits and allelic variation of interest to breeders. We focus primarily on wheat and oilseed rape, two leading examples of major polyploid crop genomes whose size or complexity present different, significant challenges. In both cases, the latest DNA sequencing technologies, applied using quite different approaches, have enabled considerable progress towards unravelling the respective genomes. Our ability to discover the extent and distribution of genetic diversity in crop gene pools, and its relationship to yield and quality-related traits, is swiftly gathering momentum as DNA sequencing and the bioinformatic tools to deal with growing quantities of genomic data continue to develop. In the coming decade, genomic and transcriptomic sequencing, discovery and high-throughput screening of single nucleotide polymorphisms, presence-absence variations and other structural chromosomal variants in diverse germplasm collections will give detailed insight into the origins, domestication and available trait-relevant variation of polyploid crops, in the process facilitating novel approaches and possibilities for genomics-assisted breeding.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-02-10T00:38:53Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Edwards, David
				 og 													Batley, Jacqueline
				 og 													Snowdon, Rod J.
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Accessing heritage tourism services</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:299075</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-05-01T17:57:09Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Pegg, Shane
				 og 													Stumbo, Norma
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:299075/UQ299075_fulltext_other.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
												
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Accessory phases from the Soultz monzogranite, Soultz-sous-Forets, France: implications for titanite destabilisation and differential REE, Y and Th mobility in hydrothermal systems</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:292629</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2013-03-03T00:57:12Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Middleton, Alexander W.
				 og 													Foerster, Hans-Juergen
				 og 													Uysal, I. Tonguc
				 og 													Golding, Suzanne D.
				 og 													Rhede, Dieter
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Access to health services and early age mortality in Ende, Indonesia</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:269108</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-03-06T11:17:56Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Adair, T.
				 og 													Pardosi, J. F.
				 og 													Rao, C.
				 og 													Kosen, S.
				 og 													Tarigan, I. U.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:269108/UQ269108.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
											<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:269108/UQ269108_peer_review.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
																	
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Acclimatisation of horses to a novel feeding system</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:282229</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Horses housed in small enclosures perform minimal exercise. A novel feeder system may promote exercise but may have behavioral consequences. The aim of this study was to determine the ability of horses to learn to use a novel feeding system and determine the behavioral effects of its use. A dynamic feed station was developed to force horses to exercise to continuously access feed. The behaviour of five groups of two horses was assessed while being housed for three days in either a control (contained a simple hay rack) and research (with the novel feeder) paddock. In the research paddock on day 1, horses were taught to use the feeder by the observer. On day 2 (feeder operational) and day 3 (feeder nonoperational) horses were observed for 4 hours per day to determine speed of learning and incidence of aggressive behaviours between horses. Horses quickly learnt to use the feeder system. Learning was affected by domination relationships between horses. Dominating horses learnt faster and aggressive behaviours appeared to be amplified when the feeder was operational. To reduce the stress impact of the feeder system on horses, horses housed together should be well matched to avoid strong domination relationships. The dynamic feeder system could then be utilized more successfully to increase exercise in horses housed in small paddocks.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-09-21T12:36:49Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Monot, J.
				 og 													Priymenko, N.
				 og 													Hampson, B.
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:282229/UQ282229_front_matter.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
											<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:282229/Wageningen_Academic_Publishers.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
																	
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Accounting for expenditure on intangibles</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:272241</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-04-04T11:48:46Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Hunter, Laurie
				 og 													Webster, Elizabeth
				 og 													Wyatt, Anne
										</author>
						
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Accounts of infant-feeding advice received by mothers: Queensland, Australia, 1945-1965</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:284703</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-11-12T11:41:48Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Thorley, Virginia
										</author>
										<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:284703/UQ284703_Fulltext.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
											<media:content url="http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/eserv/UQ:284703/UQ284703_peer_review.pdf" type="application/pdf" />
																	
  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Acculturation and language orientations of Turkish immigrants in Australia, France, Germany, and the Netherlands</title>
	  <link>http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:285620</link>
	  	
	  	 <description></description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2012-11-15T15:44:56Z</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Yagmur, Kutlay
				 og 													van de Vijver, Fons J. R.
										</author>
						
  </item>
  </channel>
</rss>