Results 121 to 130 of about 81,700 (254)

Cerebral oxygenation and skeletal muscle responses to time trial, maximal oxygen uptake and time to exhaustion exercise

open access: yesExperimental Physiology, EarlyView.
Abstract This study investigated cerebral and neuromuscular responses to three exercise models: time trial (TT), maximal oxygen uptake (V̇O2max${{\dot{V}}_{{{{\mathrm{O}}}_2}{\mathrm{max}}}}$) and time to exhaustion (TTE). Fourteen participants completed the tests in the following order: V̇O2max${{\dot{V}}_{{{{\mathrm{O}}}_2}{\mathrm{max}}}}$, TT and ...
Caroline V. Robertson   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Blue plaque review series: Thomas Graham Brown: Before his time

open access: yesExperimental Physiology, EarlyView.
Abstract Thomas Graham Brown made a seminal discovery, published in 1911 while he was a Carnegie Fellow in the University of Liverpool laboratory of Nobel Prize winner Charles S. Sherrington. Working in cats, he showed that rhythmic ‘voluntary’ behaviour, such as stepping and, by inference, walking, does not result from a chain of reflex events, but ...
Ronald L. Calabrese, Eve Marder
wiley   +1 more source

‘Enter Into the Imaginative Wild!’: Navigating Playful Pathways of Enquiry With the ‘Immersive Learning Collective’

open access: yesLiteracy, Volume 60, Issue 3, September 2026.
ABSTRACT Across many education systems globally, policy pressures and accountability frameworks have narrowed opportunities for creative and arts‐based learning, limiting teachers' capacity to develop innovative literacy pedagogies. This paper examines how collaborative, arts‐informed professional learning can support the development of affective and ...
Angela Colvert, Lisa Stephenson
wiley   +1 more source

What No Research Means: The Problematic of Time and Possibilities for Expansiveness in Interpretive Literacy Research

open access: yesReading Research Quarterly, Volume 61, Issue 3, July/August/September 2026.
ABSTRACT This article examines what becomes possible for interpretive literacy research when time is treated not as a neutral backdrop but as a central problematic. We argue that research does not merely trace temporal sequences; it actively creates temporalities that shape what becomes sensible, thinkable, and sayable within literacy studies.
Gail Boldt, Kevin Leander
wiley   +1 more source

Global Sound Movement: Morske Musak [PDF]

open access: yes
Founded in 2015 and winners of the Times Higher Education award for ‘Excellence and Innovation in the Arts 2016’, the Global Sound Movement make a significant contribution to the field of sound archiving.
Holmes, Philip Michael, Parmar, Paresh
core  

Cognitive Rehabilitation Interventions in the Intensive Care Unit: A Systematic Integrative Review

open access: yesActa Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, Volume 70, Issue 6, July 2026.
ABSTRACT Background Because critical illness, sedation, and ICU treatment commonly disrupt attention, memory, and executive function, early cognitive rehabilitation during the ICU stay may preserve or restore these capacities, reduce the delirium burden, and support engagement and recovery.
Kamila C. Lassen   +14 more
wiley   +1 more source

Navigating Environmental and Convenience Functions of Reusable Packaging for Products Sold in Bulk: A Consumer Logistics Perspective

open access: yesJournal of Business Logistics, Volume 47, Issue 3, July 2026.
ABSTRACT Products sold in bulk and the reuse of packaging are attracting growing attention. While consumers perceive reusable packaging as providing an environmental function, it is not always convenient. Reusable packaging, as a reverse logistics model, forces them to consider a new logistical role—namely, packaging that requires balancing potentially
Fanny Reniou, Elisa Robert‐Monnot
wiley   +1 more source

Nudging Resilience: Designing Decision Environments for Responding to and Recovering From Operational Disruptions

open access: yesJournal of Business Logistics, Volume 47, Issue 3, July 2026.
ABSTRACT Supply chains are not only disrupted when structures fail, but also when managers cannot make fast, sound decisions under pressure. Yet, while the structural foundations of supply chain resilience–including redundancy, modularity, and buffer capacity–are well established, the behavioral mechanisms that determine whether managers deploy them ...
Oyegoke Teslim Bukoye   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Advancing Flexible Pressure Sensors for Next‐Generation Medical Monitoring

open access: yesAdvanced Sensor Research, Volume 5, Issue 6, June 2026.
This review highlights recent advances in flexible pressure sensors for next‐generation medical monitoring. The sensing mechanisms, material and structural optimization strategies, and intelligent algorithms are systematically summarized. Emerging applications in cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological, laryngeal, and ocular disease monitoring are ...
Chunjun Su   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Subterranean environments contribute to three‐quarters of classified ecosystem services

open access: yesBiological Reviews, Volume 101, Issue 3, Page 1582-1605, June 2026.
ABSTRACT Beneath the Earth's surface lies a network of interconnected caves, voids, and systems of fissures forming in rocks of sedimentary, igneous, or metamorphic origin. Although largely inaccessible to humans, this hidden realm supports and regulates services critical to ecological health and human well‐being.
Stefano Mammola   +30 more
wiley   +1 more source

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