Drivers of phenological transitions in the seedling life stage
Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Abstract Plant functional ecology research has primarily focused on juvenile and adult plants even though regeneration from seed can be the most consequential life‐history bottleneck with cascading influence on later stages of growth and reproduction.
Mandy L. Slate +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Correction to "From Structure to Function: Zn/Mn-Modified Maghemite as an Advanced Nanoplatform for Magnetic Hyperthermia and Radionuclide Therapy". [PDF]
Ognjanović M +9 more
europepmc +1 more source
AB0595 Antiphospholipid syndrome (HUGHES SYNDROME) is a disease with protean faces: multidisciplinary approaches on serbian cohort of aps patients [PDF]
Ljudmila Stojanovich +4 more
openalex +1 more source
Analysing policy success and failure in Australia: Pink batts and set‐top boxes
Abstract This article examines two Australian government programs from the Rudd/Gillard Labor government, the Home Insulation Program (HIP) and the Digital Switchover Household Assistance Scheme (HAS). Both became shibboleths of the Labor government's perceived waste and incompetence.
Daniel Casey
wiley +1 more source
Participation Outcomes One Year After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: Associations with Cognition, Coping, and Psychological Distress. [PDF]
Pešterac-Kujundžić A +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
This article explores the activities of daily life in a village neighbouring the TEPCO nuclear power plant in Fukushima. It argues that one of the potentials of taking a dwelling perspective – a phenomenological approach to living within the ecological and social environments – emerges most compellingly within a polluted landscape.
Tomoko Sakai
wiley +1 more source
Concurrent validity of GLIM criteria in nutritional assessment of surgical patients with colorectal Cancer. [PDF]
Bobos M +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
Loanwords and Linguistic Phylogenetics: *pelek̑u‐ ‘axe’ and *(H)a(i̯)g̑‐ ‘goat’1
Abstract This paper assesses the role of borrowings in two different approaches to linguistic phylogenetics: Traditional qualitative analyses of lexemes, and quantitative computational analysis of cognacy. It problematises the assumption that loanwords can be excluded altogether from datasets of lexical cognacy.
Simon Poulsen
wiley +1 more source

