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    The global legal entity identifier system: How can it deliver? by Ka Kei Chan, Alistair Milne

    Published 2019
    “…Semi-structured interviews with data professionals revealed the many ways in which the LEI can improve both business process efficiency, and counterparty and credit risk management. …”
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    Jewelery can be worn too by Roberta Bernabei

    Published 2017
    “…It considers the extent to which jewellery artists have challenged and transformed traditional modes of display; and how, in many cases, this has expanded the language of jewellery. …”
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    Can the boundaries of community management be extended beyond rural areas? Lessons from Ghana by Steve R.K. Doe, M. Sohail

    Published 2004
    “…Operationally, the extent to which community management can be inserted into development strategies has remained elusive giving rise to instances where it has produced mixed results. …”
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    A qualitative study showing that a telecare tool can have benefits before and during the initial hearing assessment appointment by Eithne Heffernan, David Maidment, Melanie A. Ferguson

    Published 2022
    “…Theme 3 (i.e. varied impact on outcomes following the appointment): the Tool can improve patient motivation, readiness, and involvement in decision-making, though it may have limited impact on additional outcomes, such as adherence. …”
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    Supplementary Information Files for "The Global Legal Entity Identifier System: How Can It Deliver?" by Ka Kei Chan, Alistair Milne

    Published 2019
    “…Semi-structured interviews with data professionals revealed the many ways in which the LEI can improve both business process efficiency, and counterparty and credit risk management. …”
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    Data Data
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    Bus driving - can it be a good job? by Wendy Jones, Roger Haslam, Cheryl Haslam

    Published 2013
    “…Bus driving is recognised as an occupation where jobs are typically of poor quality and can have adverse effects on health. The current study explored how job quality differed for bus and coach drivers from three companies, identifying the most realistic areas for improvement, based on the similarities and differences between the companies. …”
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    Can atmospheric circulation be linked to flooding in Europe? by Christel Prudhomme, Marie Genevier

    Published 2011
    “…Relationships between flood occurrence on 488 river basins and CTCs were explored using 73 catalogues developed within COST733 Action, all defined from automatic algorithms using ERA-40 data. Results showed that at the river basin scale, some CTs have significant, positive frequency anomalies with flood occurrence. …”
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    U can’t touch this! Face touching behaviour whilst driving: implications for health, hygiene and human factors by Finian Ralph, David Large, Gary Burnett, Alexandra Lang, Andrew Morris

    Published 2021
    “…Individual behaviours differed (ranging from 5.1 to 90.7 FT/h), but there were no significant differences identified between genders, age-groups or hand used. Results are of relevance from an epidemiological/hygiene perspective within the context of the COVID-19 pandemic (and can therefore inform the design of practical solutions and encourage behavioural change to reduce the risk of self-inoculation while driving), but they also help to elucidate how habitual human behaviours are imbricated with the routine accomplishment of tasks.…”
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    Keeping a lower profile: How firms can reduce their digital carbon footprints by Tom Jackson, Ian Hodgkinson

    Published 2022
    “…Findings: Businesses continually collect, process and store knowledge, but generally fail to reuse these knowledge assets—referred to as dark data. Consequently, this dark data has a huge impact on energy use and global emissions. …”
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    Psychosocial correlates of attitudes toward male sexual violence in a sample of financial crime, property crime, general violent, and homicide offenders by Agata Debowska, Daniel Boduszek, Dominic Willmott

    Published 2017
    “…Although those currently serving prison sentences for sexual violence can be identified and receive treatment, the number of prisoners with a history of sexual violence against female partners is unknown. …”
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    Can personal development fire the "Silver Bullet" in IT delivery by Michael Elliott, Ray Dawson

    Published 2015
    “…Graduates of this course at the 18 UK universities where the course has been offered have had a very high employment rate and are much appreciated by the businesses employing them. …”
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    Multi-hazard dependencies can increase or decrease risk by John Hillier, Tom Matthews, Robert Wilby, Conor Murphy

    Published 2020
    “…In risk analysis, it is recognised that hazards can often combine to worsen their joint impact, but impact data for a rail network show that hazards can also tend to be mutually exclusive at seasonal timescales. …”
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    How can we make born-digital and digitised archives more accessible? Identifying obstacles and solutions by Lise Jaillant

    Published 2022
    “…Access to data is seen as a key priority today. Yet, the vast majority of digital cultural data preserved in archives is inaccessible due to privacy, copyright or technical issues. …”
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    Can we fix it? Archiving and analysing ‘Bob the Builder’: a resources paradigm and research method by Steven Henderson

    Published 2017
    “…Examining the current practices from other forms of archiving that are applied to animation production collections and developing a distinct model of practice from these models can achieve this. Once archiving animation materials is an established practice and data is managed in a way that reflects the acknowledges the distinctive aspects of animation as a form, data and records created from the collections can then be used as empirical evidence to enhance the study of animation. …”
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    Design and optimisation of an ultrasonic die system for forming metal cans by Christopher F. Cheers

    Published 1995
    “…A new manufacturing process has been developed for reducing the diameter of one end of a tinplate can by over 30%. …”
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    Qualitative research in marketing: what can academics do better? by Jim Crick

    Published 2020
    “…Therefore, this current paper is intended to help academics and postgraduate researchers to be aware of the mistakes that can be made when undertaking qualitative research. …”
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    Handwriting or typing exams – can we give students the choice? by Nora Mogey, Mike Purcell, J.S. Paterson, John Burk

    Published 2008
    “…Qualitative data has also been collected about the students’ attitude to and confidence in computers. …”
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    How accurately can Z-score predict bank failure? by Laura Chiaramonte, Hong Liu, Federica Poli, Mingming Zhou

    Published 2016
    “…We evaluate how well Z‐score, the widely used accounting‐based measure of bank distance to default, can predict bank failure. Using the U.S. commercial banks’ data from 2004 to 2012, we find that on average, Z‐score can predict 76% of bank failure, and additional set of other bank‐ and macro‐level variables do not increase this predictability level. …”
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    Psychological distress is related to poor health behaviours in COPD and non-COPD patients: evidence from the CanCOLD study by Nicola Paine, Simon L. Bacon, Jean Bourbeau, Wan C. Tan, Kim L. Lavoie, Shawn D. Aaron, Kenneth R. Chapman, J. Mark FitzGerald, Paul Hernandez, Darcy D. Marciniuk, Francois Maltais, Denis E. O'Donnell, Don Sin, Brandie L. Walker

    Published 2018
    “…Methods: 717 COPD and 797 matched non-COPD individuals from the CanCOLD study, completed the Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale (HADS) to assess anxiety and depression. …”
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    Developing mathematics teaching: what can we learn from the literature? by Stephanie Thomas, Barbara Jaworski

    Published 2015
    “…Three areas of literature are recognised and addressed: professional literature, in which we gain insights into the ways in which other teachers/lecturers have thought about their teaching and the approaches/strategies and frameworks they have used; research literature which offers what is known, findings from research that can enable more informed approaches to teaching; and pedagogical literature that deals overtly with developing and enhancing teaching, through the lecturer engaging with new ideas (for example those offered in the professional literature), attending to research findings or using specific tactics or teaching approaches recommended by the authors. …”
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    Developing mathematics teaching: What can we learn from the literature? by Stephanie Thomas, Barbara Jaworski

    Published 2015
    “…Three areas of literature are recognised and addressed: professional literature, in which we gain insights into the ways in which other teachers/lecturers have thought about their teaching and the approaches/strategies and frameworks they have used; research literature which offers what is known, findings from research that can enable more informed approaches to teaching; and pedagogical literature that deals overtly with developing and enhancing teaching, through the lecturer engaging with new ideas (for example those offered in the professional literature), attending to research findings or using specific tactics or teaching approaches recommended by the authors. …”
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    How can human factors be used in the design of dementia care environments? by Charlotte Jais, Sue Hignett, Eef Hogervorst, Martin Habell

    Published 2015
    “…Rising rates of dementia, coupled with an aging population, have meant that this is becoming an increasingly relevant and worthwhile topic for study as more accommodation is needed for people with dementia. …”
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    The “olfactory fingerprint”: can diagnostics be improved by combining canine and digital noses? by Giuseppe Lippi, Liam Heaney

    Published 2020
    “…This would lead the way to prosing an “olfactory fingerprint” loop, where evidence that dogs can identify the presence of human pathologies provides implicit proof of the existence of disease-specific volatilomes, which can be studied for developing laboratory techniques. …”
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    Can percolation theory explain the gelation behavior of diblock copolymer worms? by Joseph R Lovett, Matthew J Derry, Pengcheng Yang, Fiona Hatton, Nicholas J Warren, Patrick W Fowler, Steven P Armes

    Published 2018
    “…When prepared in aqueous media, such worms form thermoresponsive free-standing hydrogels that are (i) readily sterilizable, (ii) can act as a 3D matrix for the culture of normal mammalian cells and (iii) can induce stasis in human stem cell colonies. …”
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    Occlusal measurement method can affect SEMG activity during occlusion by Steph Forrester, R.G. Presswood, Andrew C. Toy, Matthew Pain

    Published 2011
    “…Similarly, subjects perceived that T-Scan® sensor and paper had the greatest effect on occlusion and were the least comfortable (P < 0·05). …”
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