2,767 results match your criteria: "Te Whare Wananga o Waikato | University of Waikato[Affiliation]"

Validation of LEOMO inertial measurement unit sensors with marker-based three-dimensional motion capture during maximum sprinting in track cyclists.

J Sports Sci

January 2024

Division of Health, Engineering, Computing and Science, Te Huataki Waiora School of Health, University of Waikato, Adams Centre for High Performance, Tauranga, New Zealand.

LEOMO™ is a commercial inertial measurement unit system that provides cycling-specific motion performance indicators (MPIs) and offers a mobile solution for monitoring cyclists. We aimed to validate the LEOMO sensors during sprint cycling using gold-standard marker-based three-dimensional (3D) motion technology (Qualisys, AB). Our secondary aim was to explore the relationship between peak power during sprints and MPIs.

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Global biodiversity is declining at an ever-increasing rate. Yet effective policies to mitigate or reverse these declines require ecosystem condition data that are rarely available. Morphology-based bioassessment methods are difficult to scale, limited in scope, suffer prohibitive costs, require skilled taxonomists, and can be applied inconsistently between practitioners.

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RNA ligases are important enzymes in molecular biology and are highly useful for the manipulation and analysis of nucleic acids, including adapter ligation in next-generation sequencing of microRNAs. Thermophilic RNA ligases belonging to the RNA ligase 3 family are gaining attention for their use in molecular biology, for example a thermophilic RNA ligase from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum is commercially available for the adenylation of nucleic acids. Here we extensively characterise a newly identified RNA ligase from the thermophilic archaeon Palaeococcus pacificus (PpaRnl).

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Objective: This study aims to investigate how athlete ethnicity is discussed in the inclusion and exclusion criteria, methodology, findings, and conclusions of research focused on menstrual health in sports science and medicine.

Design: A scoping review of sports-based research conducted on athletes related to (1) menstrual health and ethnicity, (2) how researchers include/exclude participants based on ethnicity and (3) how ethnicity is discussed.

Data Sources: Electronic search of PubMed and ProQuest.

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Utilizing supply-demand bundles in Nature-based Recreation offers insights into specific strategies for sustainable tourism management.

Sci Total Environ

April 2024

Environmental Planning Programme, School of Social Sciences, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand; Cities Research Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane 4222, Australia. Electronic address:

Balancing supply and demand in Nature-based Recreation (NbR) has the potential to yield co-benefits across multiple Ecosystem Services (ES), helping to make tourism activities more sustainable. However, a comprehensive understanding of supply-demand mismatches in NbR is challenging due to the complex interaction among various social, economic and ecological factors. This paper investigates mismatches in NbR supply and demand to provide insights for informing spatial and regional planning to achieve sustainable tourism.

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Māori perspectives on gene technologies are evolving, and traditional cultural constructs continue to inform a wide diversity of views. Here we summarise a series of research activities aimed at identifying evolving Māori perspectives on gene editing and how these inform engagement at the co-innovation interface.

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Aims: To study in-patient mortality before and after the introduction of a whole-of-system sepsis quality improvement programme at a tertiary hospital in New Zealand.

Methods: The "Raise the Flag" sepsis quality improvement programme was launched in 2018. Discharge coding data were used to identify sepsis cases between May 2015 and July 2021.

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Rural-urban variation in the utilisation of publicly funded healthcare services: an age-stratified population-level observational study.

N Z Med J

February 2024

Professor of Māori Health, Public Health Physician and GP, Ngāi Tahu Māori Health Research Unit, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Aim: To compare age-stratified public health service utilisation in Aotearoa New Zealand across the rural-urban spectrum.

Methods: Routinely collected hospitalisation, allied health, emergency department and specialist outpatient data (2014-2018), along with Census denominators, were used to calculate utilisation rates for residents in the two urban and three rural categories in the Geographic Classification for Health.

Results: Relative to their urban peers, rural Māori and rural non-Māori had lower all-cause, cardiovascular, mental health and ambulatory sensitive (ASH) hospitalisation rates.

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The effect of missing data on evolutionary analysis of sequence capture bycatch, with application to an agricultural pest.

Mol Genet Genomics

February 2024

Research School of Biology, Division of Ecology and Evolution, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia.

Sequence capture is a genomic technique that selectively enriches target sequences before high throughput next-generation sequencing, to generate specific sequences of interest. Off-target or 'bycatch' data are often discarded from capture experiments, but can be leveraged to address evolutionary questions under some circumstances. Here, we investigated the effects of missing data on a variety of evolutionary analyses using bycatch from an exon capture experiment on the global pest moth, Helicoverpa armigera.

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Purpose: Centralisation of lung cancer treatment can improve outcomes, but may result in differential access to care for those who do not reside within treatment centres.

Methods: We used national-level cancer registration and health care access data and used Geographic Information Systems (GIS) methods to determine the distance and time to access first relevant surgery and first radiation therapy among all New Zealanders diagnosed with lung cancer (2007-2019; N = 27,869), and compared these outcomes between ethnic groups. We also explored the likelihood of being treated at a high-, medium-, or low-volume hospital.

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Creek systems in restored coastal wetlands: Morphological evolution and design implications.

Sci Total Environ

April 2024

School of Ocean and Earth Sciences, National Oceanography Centre Southampton, University of Southampton, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK. Electronic address:

Saltmarsh restoration such as managed realignment (MR) projects often include excavation of simplified tidal creek networks to improve drainage and marsh functioning, but their design is based on limited evidence. This paper compares the morphological evolution of creek networks in current MR projects in the UK with creek networks in natural saltmarshes, in order to provide improved guidance. The evolution of creek networks was monitored for 2-20 years post-breach at 10 MR sites across the UK by semi-automatically extracting 12 morphological creek parameters from lidar.

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Article Synopsis
  • Drought stress significantly affects the water flow and growth of 'Hass' avocado fruits, with a notable reduction in water inflow when compared to well-watered plants.
  • Measurements showed that under water stress, fruit growth rate dropped from 1.4 cm³ per day to just 0.4 cm³ per day due to decreased water absorption and increased loss.
  • Despite the adverse effects of drought, the plants exhibited isohydric behavior, which helped to stabilize water balance, and showed a strong recovery in growth when normal watering resumed.
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Arabic punctuation dataset.

Data Brief

April 2024

Department of Linguistics, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand.

Arabic, unlike many languages, suffers from punctuation inconsistency, posing a significant obstacle for Natural Language Processing (NLP). To address this, we present the Arabic Punctuation Dataset (APD), a large collection of annotated Modern Standard Arabic texts designed to train machine learning models in sentence boundary identification and punctuation prediction. APD leverages the "theme-rheme completion" principle, a grammatical feature closely linked to consistent punctuation placement.

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Outcomes of Valvular Heart Disease-How Can We Close the Gap for Indigenous Patients?

Heart Lung Circ

January 2024

Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Vic, and Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. Electronic address:

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Article Synopsis
  • Achieving a proper diagnosis for Indigenous individuals with rare genetic diseases is essential for fair healthcare access.
  • The International Rare Disease Research Consortium has created a global Task Force aimed at addressing the challenges in diagnosing these rare diseases among Indigenous populations.
  • The initiative focuses on finding solutions to improve health equity for Indigenous communities dealing with these illnesses.
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Agency in the Anthropocene: education for planetary health.

Lancet Planet Health

February 2024

School of Forest, Fisheries, and Geomatics Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.

Collective action is essential to address planetary health as current and future environmental challenges are socioecological and require coordinated, informed, and sustained action from all societal sectors. Education that engages intergenerational communities is a crucial means of building collective action as it provides opportunities to develop an informed citizenry capable of making the necessary decisions to work towards planetary health. Schools are valuable sites of community learning and action, and will benefit from a new orientation towards and commitment to educator training, curriculum development, and youth agency.

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Earth's persistent habitability since the Archean remains poorly understood. Using an oxygen isotope ensemble approach-comprising shale, iron oxide, carbonate, silica, and phosphate records-we reconcile a multibillion-year history of seawater δO, temperature, and marine and terrestrial clay abundance. Our results reveal a rise in seawater δO and a temperate Proterozoic climate distinct to interpretations of a hot early Earth, indicating a strongly buffered climate system.

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Background: Musculoskeletal pain while running is a concern to women during pregnancy and can lead to running cessation. To support women who wish to run during pregnancy, it is essential to understand the sites, severities and personal risk factors associated with musculoskeletal pain.

Objective: The aim was to investigate prevalence and risk factors for musculoskeletal pain when running during pregnancy.

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Flashbulb memories (FBMs) refer to vivid and long-lasting autobiographical memories for the circumstances in which people learned of a shocking and consequential public event. A cross-national study across eleven countries aimed to investigate FBM formation following the first COVID-19 case news in each country and test the effect of pandemic-related variables on FBM. Participants had detailed memories of the date and others present when they heard the news, and had partially detailed memories of the place, activity, and news source.

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Elucidating phosphorus removal dynamics in a denitrifying woodchip bioreactor.

Sci Total Environ

March 2024

Environmental Research Institute, School of Science, Faculty of Science and Engineering, University of Waikato, Kirikirioa Hamilton, New Zealand; Lincoln Agritech Ltd, Ruakura, Kirikirioa Hamilton 3214, New Zealand. Electronic address:

Denitrifying woodchip bioreactors (DBRs) are an established nitrate mitigation technology, but uncertainty remains on their viability for phosphorus (P) removal due to inconsistent source-sink behaviour in field trials. We investigated whether iron (Fe) redox cycling could be the missing link needed to explain P dynamics in these systems. A pilot-scale DBR (Aotearoa New Zealand) was monitored for the first two drainage seasons (2017-2018), with supplemental in-field measurements of reduced solutes (Fe, HS/HS) and their conjugate oxidised species (Fe/SO) made in 2021 to constrain within-reactor redox gradients.

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Purpose: Lung cancer is the biggest cancer killer of indigenous peoples worldwide, including Māori people in New Zealand. There is some evidence of disparities in access to lung cancer treatment between Māori and non-Māori patients, but an examination of the depth and breadth of these disparities is needed. Here, we use national-level data to examine disparities in access to surgery, radiation therapy and systemic therapy between Māori and European patients, as well as timing of treatment relative to diagnosis.

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Dataset of 3D computer models of Late Miocene Mount Messenger Formation outcrops in New Zealand, built with UAV drones.

Data Brief

February 2024

Sedimentary Environments and Analogues Research Group, Earth and Environmental Sciences, School of Science, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.

The aim of constructing 3D computer models of outcrops of the Mount Messenger Formation using unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) drone technology was to enable better visualization and potential for analysis of deep-water sedimentary systems in Taranaki Basin, New Zealand. The Late Miocene-aged strata crop out along the north Taranaki coast of western North Island, New Zealand. The Mount Messenger Formation sandstone and siltstone beds are outstanding examples of deep-water sedimentary strata.

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Background: There are significant inequities between Māori (Indigenous people) and non-Māori in ageing outcomes. This study used a strengths-based approach based on the key cultural concept of mana motuhake (autonomy and self-actualisation) to develop a tuakana-teina (literally older sibling-younger sibling) peer education programme to assist kaumātua (elders) in addressing health and social needs. The purpose of this study was to test the impact on those receiving the programme.

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This work presents the first systematic comparison of selenium (Se) speciation in plasma from cancer patients treated orally with three Se compounds (sodium selenite, SS; L-selenomethionine, SeMet; or Se-methylselenocysteine, MSC) at 400 µg/day for 28 days. The primary goal was to investigate how these chemical forms of Se affect the plasma Se distribution, aiming to identify the most effective Se compound for optimal selenoprotein expression. This was achieved using methodology based on HPLC-ICP-MS after sample preparation/fractionation approaches.

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