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1

Hui, Aika, Luke Sheridan Rains, Anita Todd, Annette Boaz, and Sonia Johnson. "The accuracy and accessibility of cited evidence: a study examining mental health policy documents." Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 55, no. 1 (October 22, 2019): 111–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-019-01786-8.

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Abstract Purpose Evidence-based policy making is increasingly being advocated by governments and scholars. To show that policies are informed by evidence, policy-related documents that cite external sources should ideally provide direct access to, and accurately represent, the referenced source and the evidence it provides. Our aim was to find a way to systematically assess the prevalence of referencing accuracy and accessibility issues in referenced statements selected from a sample of mental health-related policy documents. Method 236 referenced statements were selected from 10 mental health-related policy documents published between 2013 and 2018. Policy documents were chosen as the focus of this investigation because of their relative accessibility and impact on clinical practice. Statements were rated against their referenced sources in terms of the (i) content accuracy in relation to the information provided by the referenced source and (ii) degree of accessibility of the source and the required evidence from the references provided. Results Of the 236 statements, 141 (59.7%) accurately represented the referenced source, 45 (19.1%) contained major errors and 50 (21.2%) contained minor errors in accuracy. For accessibility, 126 (53.4%) directly referenced primary sources of evidence that supported the claims made, 36 (15.3%) contained indirect references, 18 (7.6%) provided ‘dead-end’ references, and 11 (4.7%) references were completely inaccessible. Conclusions With only slightly over half of all statements assessed providing fully accessible references and accurately representing the referenced source, these components of referencing quality deserve further attention if evidence-informed policy goals are to be achieved. The rating framework used in the current study proved to be a simple and straightforward method to assess these components and can provide a baseline against which interventions can be designed to improve referencing quality.
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2

Corkett, Michael. "The Quality of Canadian and U.S. Government Health Documents Remains Unchallenged Until Better Research Can Be Undertaken." Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 1, no. 4 (December 11, 2006): 74. http://dx.doi.org/10.18438/b8rc71.

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A review of: Lambert, Frank. “Assessing the Authoritativeness of Canadian and American Health Documents: A Comparative Analysis Using Informetric Methodologies.” Government Information Quarterly 22.2 (2005): 277-96. Objective - To assess by means of citation analysis whether the public trust afforded health documents published by the Canadian and U.S. governments is appropriate, and to ascertain whether differences in the respective health care systems influence how publications are produced. Design – Comparative study. Setting – The Canadian Depository Service Program (DSP) and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) web sites. Subjects – One hundred sixty-six electronic documents sourced from the DSP website, and 284 electronic documents sourced from the DHHS website. Methods – Subjects were randomly selected from repositories offering the most comprehensive collections. Documents with evidence of references to other works used in preparation were separated from those without such characteristics. Data variables were collected from documents with evidence of references. Statistical analysis of the data was undertaken. Main results – Of the respective samples, 89 (53%) from the DSP and 109 (38.4%) from the DHHS contained references. Personal authors were identified in 46 (51.7%) and 63 (58%) of the respective subsets. Handbooks and guidebooks accounted for the largest portion of the DSP subset (29; 32.6%) and government periodicals were the largest constituent of the DHHS subset (41; 37.6%). Scholarly journals were the most common reference type for both the DSP (44%) and the DHHS (58.5%) subsets. The number of references per document was widely dispersed for both subsets; the DSP mean was approximately 64 (SD=114.68) and the DHHS was 73.71 (SD=168.85). Kruskal-Wallis subset analysis of median number of references by document type found differences generalizable to the entire DSP and DHHS populations. Health Canada Reports, handbooks, and guidebooks contained significantly more references than periodical articles or fact sheets. Certain DHSS documents, classified as “other,” contained more references than periodical articles. Canadian documents were more likely to contain references than U.S. documents. Comparison of documents to determine whether one country employs more rigorous citation practices did not produce statistically significant results. U.S. Federal Government documents are more likely to be referenced in other U.S. government health documents, compared to Canadian publications. The presence of references in documents from either country significantly affected likelihood of being cited by web authors. Conclusion – Significant differences in reference use frequencies between DSP and DHHS documents challenges Foskett’s stance that documents of value contain references (Foskett). Use of peer-reviewed scholarly journals for both DSP and DHHS publications was reassuring, suggesting a fairly rigorous publication standard. Reliance of DHHS publications upon federal government documents remains unclear. Referencing of DSP documents, irrespective of reference usage suggests a level of trust towards Canadian government health publications. Web authors appear more comfortable citing referenced DHHS documents. Further study could involve the examination of reference frequency by journal compared against journal impact factors.
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GECAN, JOHN S., STANLEY M. CICHOWICZ, and PARIS M. BRICKEY. "Analytical Techniques for Glass Contamination of Food: A Guide for Administrators and Analysts." Journal of Food Protection 53, no. 10 (October 1, 1990): 895–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.4315/0362-028x-53.10.895.

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An analytical scheme is presented to provide an overview of techniques applicable to glass contamination in a variety of consumer products. Procedures are referenced or presented in detail, with emphasis on quality assurance. References on forensic and analytical methods for the examination of glass are provided.
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4

Offutt, Jeff. "Globalization-references and citations." Software Testing, Verification and Reliability 24, no. 1 (December 20, 2013): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/stvr.1521.

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Topfer, Leigh-Ann, Antoni Parada, Devidas Menon, Hussein Noorani, Christine Perras, and Mateu Serra-Prat. "COMPARISON OF LITERATURE SEARCHES ON QUALITY AND COSTS FOR HEALTH TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT USING THE MEDLINE AND EMBASE DATABASES." International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care 15, no. 2 (May 1999): 297–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266462399015226.

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Biomedical databases are an important source of information for health technology assessment. However, there is considerable variation in the costs of accessing commercial databases. We sought to measure the quality, amount of overlap, and costs of information retrieved from two of the main database sources — MEDLINE and EMBASE. Librarians at two health technology assessment agencies ran a total of eight literature searches on various medical technologies, using both databases. All search results were independently reviewed by two researchers. The researchers were asked to identify relevant references and to rank each of these according to a level of evidence scale. The results were tabulated to show the number of references identified by each database, the number of relevant references ranked by level of evidence, and the number of these references that were unique to one or the other database. The cost of retrieving references from each source was also calculated. Each database contained relevant references not available in the other. Because of the longer time lag for indexing in MEDLINE, many of the references that originally appeared to be unique to EMBASE were subsequently available in MEDLINE as well. Since our study was conducted, MEDLINE has been made available worldwide, free of charge, via the Internet. Hence, the cost difference between the databases is now even greater. However, notwithstanding the costs, it appears that literature searches that rely on only one or the other database will inevitably miss pertinent information.
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Wildemuth, Barbara M. "Libraries’ Contributions to the Quality of UK University Research Environments Were Not Acknowledged in REF 2014, but Could Be Made More Visible in REF 2021." Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 16, no. 1 (March 15, 2021): 112–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.18438/eblip29889.

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A Review of: Walker, D. (2020). Libraries and the REF: How do librarians contribute to research excellence? Insights, 33(1), 6. https://doi.org/10.1629/uksg.497 Abstract Objective – To measure the extent to which libraries’ contributions to United Kingdom (UK) university research excellence were referenced in the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014 unit-level research environment statements, and to make recommendations to libraries for increasing their visibility in the research setting. Design – Content analysis of an existing corpus. Setting – Evaluation of research environments conducted as part of the UK REF 2014 assessment. Subjects – 1,891 unit-level research environment statements submitted for REF 2014. Methods – Each unit-level research environment statement was categorized in terms of how extensively it referenced library or librarian contributions: no mention, brief mention, or substantive mention. The frequency and percentage of each level of mention are reported overall and by disciplinary panel. Main Results – Across all panels, only 25.8% of the statements included substantive references to the library or librarians; most of these were lists of electronic and physical collections, but they also included discussions of the research support services offered by librarians. There were disciplinary differences in the extent of the references to libraries, from 7.2% containing substantive references in a panel examining science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) units to 44.0% containing substantive references in the panel examining arts and humanities units. Conclusion – In REF 2014, libraries and librarians were rarely discussed in unit-level research environment statements. While this lack of representation may be due to shortcomings of the library’s relationship with the university’s research office, librarians could use a number of approaches to becoming more visible in the REF 2021 research environment statements. Specifically, they could highlight their roles in: ensuring discoverability and accessibility of information resources to researchers; improving research practices through teaching informational and organizational skills, providing direct support to research students and staff, and providing research data management services; managing the research information systems that capture and make discoverable the university’s non-article research outputs; providing support in relation to the responsible use of bibliometrics and other measures of article quality and impact; further developing article impact by training researchers to use social media to their advantage; developing open research initiatives; and assisting with the REF submission process.
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Wang, Jie, Jiwei Liu, Gang Hou, Yanshuo Yu, and Kuan Jiu Zhou. "Quality Evaluation Method of Undergraduate Thesis References Based on Hadoop." International Journal of Database Theory and Application 7, no. 4 (August 31, 2014): 227–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.14257/ijdta.2014.7.4.18.

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Mandoh, Mona, and Colin Michael Curtain. "Quality of claims and references found in Australian pharmacy journal advertisements." International Journal of Pharmacy Practice 25, no. 5 (November 29, 2016): 365–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijpp.12326.

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9

Yongsoon Eun, P. T. Kabamba, and S. M. Meerkov. "Tracking of random references: Random sensitivity function and tracking quality indicators." IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control 48, no. 9 (September 2003): 1666–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tac.2003.817013.

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10

Roberts, Derek E., and Peter J. Spreadbury. "Assessment of the performance of zener references of the highest quality." IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement IM-36, no. 4 (December 1987): 913–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tim.1987.6312581.

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Farris II, M. Theodore, Jeanne D. Maes, and Ulla K. Bunz. "References and Bibliography: Citing the Internet." Journal of Applied Business Research (JABR) 14, no. 3 (August 31, 2011): 33. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/jabr.v14i3.5701.

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<span>Over the past six years scholars have found the Internet to be a source of quick information. While the quality of information on the Internet may be questionable, nonetheless, sources of online studies are beginning to merge with library-based research. This article discusses the history of the Internet; concerns of using the Internet as a source, the importance of citing sources and how to cite electronic sources.</span>
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Lin, Wen Tsann, Shen Tsu Wang, Meng Hua Li, Chun Ming Huang, and Shih Wei Lin. "A Study on Research and Development Strategies of Total Heat Exchanger Using Systematic Methods." Advanced Materials Research 403-408 (November 2011): 5299–302. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.403-408.5299.

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This study intends to determine market demand for total heat exchangers, and then develop research and development (R&D) strategies to satisfy customers' needs and improve corporate competitiveness. Kano 2-D quality model analysis and questionnaire survey were conducted to identify the importance of customers' expectations of quality constructs, and Kano quality factors of classified quality constructs. The opinion difference of customer attributes for quality construct was then compared. Finally, the results of Kano questionnaires and quality function deployment (QFD) were combined to construct a house of quality, with the voice of customers (VOC) incorporated into the design and planning of total heat exchangers. The results showed that consumers pay attention to convenience of use and the function of improving indoor air quality. The findings can serve as references for manufacturers to identify the qualities of total heat exchangers that attract customers, and design products that satisfy customers’ needs. The results can also serves as references for the development of future energy-saving air conditioning.
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Paquot, Magali, and Luke Plonsky. "Quantitative research methods and study quality in learner corpus research." International Journal of Learner Corpus Research 3, no. 1 (May 22, 2017): 61–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijlcr.3.1.03paq.

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Abstract This study aims to provide the first empirical assessment of quantitative research methods and study quality in learner corpus research. We systematically review quantitative primary studies referenced in the Learner Corpus Bibliography (LCB), a representative bibliography of learner corpus research maintained by the Learner Corpus Association which contained 1,276 references when the current study began. Each primary study in the LCB was coded for over fifty features representing six dimensions: (a) publication type (i.e. conference paper, book chapter, journal article), (b) research focus (e.g. lexis, grammar), (c) methodological features (e.g. keyword analysis, error analysis, use of reference corpus), (d) statistical analyses (e.g. X², t-test, regression analysis), and (e) reporting practices (e.g. reliability coefficients, means). Results point to several systematic strengths as well as many flaws, such as the absence of research questions, incomplete and inconsistent reporting practices (e.g. means without standard deviations), and lack of statistical literacy (i.e. LCR studies generally overrely on tests of statistical significance, do not report effect sizes, rarely check or report whether statistical assumptions have been met, and rarely use multivariate analyses). Improvements over time, however, are clearly noted and there are signs that, like other related disciplines, learner corpus research is slowly undergoing methodological reform.
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Velychko, Oleh. "Linking results of key and supplementary comparisons of AC/DC voltage transfer references." International Journal of Metrology and Quality Engineering 9 (2018): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/ijmqe/2018002.

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A regional key comparison (KC) COOMET.EM-K6.a and a supplementary comparison (SC) COOMET.EM-S1 of AC/DC voltage transfer references were conducted between participating laboratories from the Eurasian region. Measurements were made over the period 2004–2014. The results showed good agreement between all but one of the participating laboratories. The proposed procedure of linking results of key and SCs of regional metrology organization of AC/DC voltage transfer references is presented. Linking results is realized for COOMET.EM-K6.a and CCEM-K6.a KCs, and for COOMET.EM-K6.a KC and COOMET.EM-S1 SC.
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Ma, Xiu Ying, Yun Xiang Liu, and Wan Jun Yu. "Quality Evaluation of Dairy Products Based on Electronic Nose." Applied Mechanics and Materials 475-476 (December 2013): 524–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.475-476.524.

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The construction of Electronic Nose system and associated signal processing methods were introduced .Then special references to applications to dairy products, such as the classification of different milk, the milk with different shelf-lives, flavor quality evaluation, antibiotics resedues detection and quality control were discussed. The results show that the quality of dairy products can be evaluated effectively using Electronic Nose system. The development trends of Electronic Nose are presented.
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Anttila, Juhani, and Kari Jussila. "Understanding quality – conceptualization of the fundamental concepts of quality." International Journal of Quality and Service Sciences 9, no. 3/4 (September 18, 2017): 251–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijqss-03-2017-0020.

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Purpose The purpose of this study is to challenge bridging the gap between the problems of the existing quality profession and the existing and emerging challenges of quality with regard to people, organizations and societies, hence broadening the traditional coverage of quality from the organizations to these three hierarchial societal levels. Design/methodology/approach Through professional involvement with researching, developing and practicing quality principles, methodologies and solutions in practice for decades, the authors became convinced that the prevailing conceptual thinking of quality is not based on the valid scientific basis and contains the problem of superficiality. Hence also the practical quality applications are fragmented and vague. As a reaction to the situation, the authors clarify the conceptual essence of quality, its historical background and usage in today’s everyday and professional contexts. Findings In this article, the authors present a solid scientific baseline for the ontological fundamentals of the quality discipline, on which also the epistemological pondering can be built, hence establishing the robust foundation for the practical quality management applications. Originality/value This conceptual article is an original research and review paper, contributing to the revival process of the quality profession in its entirety, including quality research, education and practices. The study is based on the authors’ multidisciplinary experience, theoretical reflecting and recognized references.
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Zarlis, Muhammad, Sherly Astuti, and Muhammad Salamuddin. "Analysis of Reading, Reference and Information Management on the Quality of Scientific Writing." Aptisi Transactions on Management (ATM) 2, no. 1 (January 2, 2018): 63–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.33050/atm.v2i1.782.

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In education, for educational instruments scientific writing is a very important thing. It requires an information management skill, information management is a library search, which can be done through a computer and guided by the internet. It can also be through the quality of reading used as a reference for scientific writing. In addition, in producing a paper also must know the management of writing, not only required to pay attention to the rules of standard language, but also must be able to convey ideas and ideas well and meet scientific criteria, such as making a quote or reference list used. This paper was written with the aim of improving the quality of research through reading material, making notes and avoiding plagiarism, references using the Harvard system for journals, books, and articles. Management of citing articles either CD or internet, writing, editing, storing references electronically, writing bibliography, and quotations.
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Rachman, Natriya Faisal, and Dedik Tri Istiantara. "The Effect of Price and Service Quality on Train User Satisfaction and Loyalty." Jurnal Perkeretaapian Indonesia 1, no. 2 (November 20, 2017): 127–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.37367/jpi.v1i2.39.

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The quality of railroad service users in accordance with customer expectations can increase the tendency of customers to make repeat purchases, provide recommendations to others about their beneficial experiences, while customer loyalty is related to the possibility of returning customers, making business references, giving strong words, and offering references and publicity about services on the train. This study is a cross-sectional study where testing is based on data that occurs at one point in time, so that the model built is not designed to capture changes that occur due to time shift. The analysis in this study uses the statistical method of the Structural Equation Model (SEM). From the results of this study it can be concluded that the price, service quality, and customer satisfaction variables influence consumer attitudes towards loyalty applied to the Argowilis Train. This gives understanding for the Argowilis Train to see prices, improve service quality, and increase customer satisfaction.
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Conquest, Jennifer H., Nirjgot Gill, Praveena Sivanujan, John Skinner, Estie Kruger, and Marc Tennant. "Systematic Literature Review of Capitation and Fee-for-Service Payment Models for Oral Health Services: An Australian Perspective." Healthcare 9, no. 9 (August 30, 2021): 1129. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9091129.

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The aim of this review was to assess relevant global literature on capped-fee (CF) and fee-for-service (FFS) payment models as used by public dental services. Research data were assessed through the PRISMA check list and sourced from MEDLINE, PubMed, ProQuest, Cochrane Library, and other methods. The inclusion criteria were peer reviewed articles published between 2004 and 2020 and (i) other countries’ health systems that were evaluated in contrast to Australia; (ii) care provided to individuals; (iii) payment models for private services that were the same as Australian government policy (CF and FFS); and (iv) care provided by dentists. We used a mixed methodology for data collection. A total of 262 references were reviewed with 10 references meeting the inclusion criteria with the quality rating being: three—strong, six—moderate, and one—weak. The literature included studies from Sweden (three references), Ireland (three references), United Kingdom (six references), United States of America (two references), and Norway (one reference). Four references included studies within multiple countries. The sample size varied between 20 and 106,874 participants. The two payment systems can impact on individual outcomes, such as by overtreatment in an FFS system and undertreatment in a CF system.
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Zhu, Z. J., Z. G. Li, S. Rahardja, and P. Fränti. "Recovering real-world scene: high-quality image inpainting using multi-exposed references." Electronics Letters 45, no. 25 (2009): 1310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/el.2009.2686.

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Rothermich, Elizabeth A., and Dev S. Pathak. "References for health-related quality-of-life claims in prescription drug advertisements." American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy 54, no. 22 (November 15, 1997): 2596–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajhp/54.22.2596.

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Lewoniewski, Włodzimierz, Krzysztof Węcel, and Witold Abramowicz. "Modeling Popularity and Reliability of Sources in Multilingual Wikipedia." Information 11, no. 5 (May 13, 2020): 263. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/info11050263.

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One of the most important factors impacting quality of content in Wikipedia is presence of reliable sources. By following references, readers can verify facts or find more details about described topic. A Wikipedia article can be edited independently in any of over 300 languages, even by anonymous users, therefore information about the same topic may be inconsistent. This also applies to use of references in different language versions of a particular article, so the same statement can have different sources. In this paper we analyzed over 40 million articles from the 55 most developed language versions of Wikipedia to extract information about over 200 million references and find the most popular and reliable sources. We presented 10 models for the assessment of the popularity and reliability of the sources based on analysis of meta information about the references in Wikipedia articles, page views and authors of the articles. Using DBpedia and Wikidata we automatically identified the alignment of the sources to a specific domain. Additionally, we analyzed the changes of popularity and reliability in time and identified growth leaders in each of the considered months. The results can be used for quality improvements of the content in different languages versions of Wikipedia.
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Hurton, Scott, Robin Urquhart, Cynthia Kendall, Margaret Jorgensen, Geoff Porter, Adrian Levy, and Michele Molinari. "Quality of surgical care of pancreatic cancer in a single payer North American health care system." F1000Research 5 (August 15, 2016): 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.9199.1.

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Introduction: Quality of surgical care of Canadian patients with pancreatic cancer (PC) is inadequately known. Primary aim of this study was to analyze the quality of care received by patients who underwent resections of PC in Nova Scotia over a 10-year period (2001-2011). Methods: All patients with PC (n. 1094) were identified using provincial cancer registries and only adult patients with resectable disease were included in the study (n. 109). Well established disease-specific quality indicators (QIs) were used as references. The proportion of patients who met those QIs was calculated. The average and 95 % confidence intervals of QIs were compared between patients treated in Nova Scotia and published references. Results: Surgical therapy was performed in 9.9 % of patients. Perioperative morbidity and mortality occurred in 25 % and 5 % of patients respectively. Overall survival was 57 % at 1 year, 18 % at 3 year and 9 % at 5 year. R1 resections occurred in 38 % of patients. When compared to published quality measures, patients in Nova Scotia had similar outcomes except for an inferior number of lymph nodes found in the surgical specimens (9 vs. 19; P<0.05). On the other hand, a significant proportion of patients did not fully meet several QIs linked to preoperative, surgical pathology and postoperative care. Conclusions: In Nova Scotia, the proportion of patients who underwent surgery for PC was lower than expected. Although perioperative morbidity, mortality and survival rates were comparable to published references, many did not meet established standard QIs.
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McKenna, SP. "Measuring quality of life in schizophrenia." European Psychiatry 12, S3 (1997): 267s—274s. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0924-9338(97)89096-7.

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Summary A literature review identified nearly 500 papers in which references to quality of life (QoL) were made in the context of schizophrenia. Despite this, only two studies could be found where efforts had been made to assess the impact of pharmaceutical products on the QoL of patients with schizophrenia. It is argued that lack of progress in this area of research results from the absence of an adequate schizophrenia-specific QoL instrument. The present paper details the requirements for such an instrument, reviews health status instruments that have been used with schizophrenic patients and describes the methodology required for producing a new instrument. It is argued that the pharmaceutical industry should consider joint financing of such development work, given the importance of a reliable, valid and responsive outcome instrument for clinical trials. Such an instrument would also prove valuable when assessing alternative management programmes.
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Schumann, Holger, Axel Berres, Tilman Stehr, and Dominik Engelhardt. "Effective Selection of Quality Literature During a Systematic Literature Review." Informing Science: The International Journal of an Emerging Transdiscipline 23 (2020): 077–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4551.

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Aim/Purpose: Although a literature review is the fundamental base for any research, it is often considered tedious and conducted with a lack of methodology and rigor. The paper presents a method for systematically searching and screening literature using modern search technologies. The method focuses on minimizing the amount of manual screening by employing the references among papers. Background: A method to select quality literature effectively using modern search technologies is presented and evaluated. Methodology: The method starts with a keywords search in which the most suitable keywords are identified. In the backward search, promising resources are collected based on the keywords and their reference sections are searched for duplicates to find often cited basic literature. Then, the forward search identifies current literature that cites the basic sources. Contribution: Modern search technologies have the potential to improve the effectiveness of the use of information channels significantly and thus of traditional literature searches. Findings: The selection method was applied to the field of literature review itself and to the field of functional modelling. In both cases, relevant literature was identified within a surprisingly short time. Recommendation for Researchers: Literature reviews should be done systematically by using modern search technologies. Future Research: The presented method may be adapted according to the evolution of search technologies. The tool support for the automated extraction of references should be improved and a quantitative evaluation of the method in comparison to traditional reviews may foster the findings.
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Sun, Kai, and Jing Yang Li. "Construction Technology and Quality Control of Dry Hanging Method for Stone Material." Applied Mechanics and Materials 353-356 (August 2013): 2862–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.353-356.2862.

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This article introduces the application of dry hanging method of stone material on the wall, elucidates dry hanging construction technology and construction process, gives a description of quality control key points of dry hanging method, analysis the common quality defects during construction and provides some corresponding prevention methods and amending measures to ensure the project quality and the decoration effect, which provides references to enhance construction quality management of stone material facing construction.
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Magulod, Gilbert C., Leonilo B. Capulso, Cinder Dianne L. Tabiolo, Merlyn N. Luza, and Mary Grace C. Ramada. "Use of Technology-Based Tools in Ensuring Quality of Publishable Journal Articles." International Journal of Learning, Teaching and Educational Research 19, no. 11 (November 30, 2020): 145–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.26803/ijlter.19.11.9.

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Scientific publication is a pillar that gauges the human intellectual capital of countries in the global innovation index. This paper presents the effectiveness of using technology-based tools in ensuring the quality of articles for journal publication. It employed a pre-and post-test research design to determine the effectiveness of online technology-based tools before and after the intervention. It employed a descriptive presentation of the different online technology tools used in the 21 specimens of faculty research written in publishable article formats. It examined the quality of references, level of readability, writing quality, originality, and grammar of the papers before and after the review process and interventions. The study highlighted that using the online tools improved the quality of the documents on grammar and lexical rate, similarity index, readability index, number of references, number of correct bibliographic entries for submission in high impact journals. A higher level of a cleansing process using online technology tools ensures the quality of publishable articles. Implications of this study will facilitate the academic community's journal article writing skill to effectively disseminate research studies results with higher chances of being accepted in respected global databases to contribute to knowledge generation and development of the country.
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Magulod, Gilbert C., Leonilo B. Capulso, Cinder Dianne L. Tabiolo, Merlyn N. Luza, and Mary Grace C. Ramada. "Use of Technology-Based Tools in Ensuring Quality of Publishable Journal Articles." International Journal of Learning, Teaching and Educational Research 19, no. 11 (November 30, 2020): 145–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.26803/ijlter.19.11.9.

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Scientific publication is a pillar that gauges the human intellectual capital of countries in the global innovation index. This paper presents the effectiveness of using technology-based tools in ensuring the quality of articles for journal publication. It employed a pre-and post-test research design to determine the effectiveness of online technology-based tools before and after the intervention. It employed a descriptive presentation of the different online technology tools used in the 21 specimens of faculty research written in publishable article formats. It examined the quality of references, level of readability, writing quality, originality, and grammar of the papers before and after the review process and interventions. The study highlighted that using the online tools improved the quality of the documents on grammar and lexical rate, similarity index, readability index, number of references, number of correct bibliographic entries for submission in high impact journals. A higher level of a cleansing process using online technology tools ensures the quality of publishable articles. Implications of this study will facilitate the academic community's journal article writing skill to effectively disseminate research studies results with higher chances of being accepted in respected global databases to contribute to knowledge generation and development of the country.
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Manzanero, Antonio L., Beatriz López, and Javier Aróztegui. "Underlying processes behind false perspective production." Anales de Psicología 32, no. 1 (December 25, 2015): 256. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/analesps.32.1.194461.

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<p>This study aimed to determine the extent to which content analysis can provide useful information when discriminating between actual versus false statements. Participants were instructed to either describe a traffic accident as eyewitness actual role or to describe the accident as a simulated victim. Data were analysed in terms of accuracy and quality, and were represented using high dimensional visualization (HDV). In Experiment 1 (between-participant design), participants made significantly more references to cognitive operations, more self-references and less changes in order when describing the event as simulated victim. In Experiment 2 (within-participants design) participants also made significantly more references to cognitive operations and more self references when describing the event from the simulated victim as well as being less accurate, providing less irrelevant information and more evaluative comments. HDV graphics indicated that false statements differ holistically from actual ones.</p>
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Martins, Diana Clarisse Pires, Sandra Emanuela da Silva Soares, Marta Maria Monteiro de Jesus, Joana Isabel Almendra Gomes, Tânia Gisela Miranda Dias, António José Gonçalves Fernandes, and Vera Ferro-Lebres. "The Quality of Portuguese Obesity Websites." International Journal of Web Portals 5, no. 4 (October 2013): 46–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijwp.2013100104.

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The objective of this study was to evaluate the quality of Portuguese obesity websites. A cross-sectional, quantitative and observational study was designed. The evaluation of 127 sites found using the Google in “Advanced Search” option “pages in Portuguese”, country “Portugal” was performed. The quality criteria used in this study resulted from the merger/adaptation from several authors previously published. The information on obesity was evaluated according to the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network: Management of Obesity, a National Clinical Guideline, 2010. The quality criteria most mentioned in the websites, were the purpose (80.3%) and authority (73.2%). On the other hand, the editorial review (7.9%) and references (15.7%) were mentioned in the narrowest websites. The websites analyzed had a mean quality score of 5.2 points (± 2.1) out of 11. A significant correlation was found between the score of information on obesity and quality score for adults group (0.282) and both ages group (0.437). In Portugal, the websites that provide information on obesity had, generally, a low quality score.
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31

Liu, Chun Lin, Wei Yan Shang, Wen Lin Min, Liu Yin Xiao, and Cun Yue Cheng. "Study on the Quality and Accuracy of Blanking Workpiece." Applied Mechanics and Materials 201-202 (October 2012): 348–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.201-202.348.

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In order to improve the quality and accuracy of blanking workpiece, reasonable measures have been proposed during the production process. Firstly, the quality precision of blanking workpiece has been classified into three grades, corresponding to each type of dimensional accuracy, reasonal range of blanking clearance has been selected. Then the relationship of blanking clearance size with blanking quality has also been analyzed, and the affection of blanking clearances to dimensional accuracy has also been analyzed.At last, the method to improve the workpiece quality has been proposed, and the measure has been put forward to solve problems of quality and accuracy. The results refer useful references to improve the quality of stampings.
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Szymański, Julian, and Tomasz Boiński. "Crowdsourcing-Based Evaluation of Automatic References Between WordNet and Wikipedia." International Journal of Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering 29, no. 03 (March 2019): 317–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0218194019500141.

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The paper presents an approach to build references (also called mappings) between WordNet and Wikipedia. We propose four algorithms used for automatic construction of the references. Then, based on an aggregation algorithm, we produce an initial set of mappings that has been evaluated in a cooperative way. For that purpose, we implement a system for the distribution of evaluation tasks, that have been solved by the user community. To make the tasks more attractive, we embed them into a game. Results show the initial mappings have good quality, and they have also been improved by the community. As a result, we deliver a high quality dataset of the mappings between two lexical repositories: WordNet and Wikipedia, that can be used in a wide range of NLP tasks. We also show that the framework for collaborative validation can be used in other tasks that require human judgments.
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33

Sharevski, Filipo. "Assessing the Quality of Online News Articles as References for an Encyclopaedia Entry." International Journal of Artificial Intelligence & Applications 6, no. 4 (July 30, 2015): 73–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.5121/ijaia.2015.6407.

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34

Kumar, Ranjeet, and Ramesh Chandra Tripathi. "References-based search methodology for assuring acceptable quality of a query research article." International Journal of Information Technology and Management 16, no. 3 (2017): 237. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijitm.2017.085021.

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Kumar, Ranjeet, and Ramesh Chandra Tripathi. "References-based search methodology for assuring acceptable quality of a query research article." International Journal of Information Technology and Management 16, no. 3 (2017): 237. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijitm.2017.10005171.

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36

Hardenbergh, Sabrina H. B. "Behavioral quality and caloric intake in Malagasy children relative to international growth references." American Journal of Human Biology 8, no. 2 (1996): 207–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1520-6300(1996)8:2<207::aid-ajhb8>3.0.co;2-z.

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37

Geiger, Matthias, Stephan Koblmüller, Giacomo Assandri, Andreas Chovanec, Torbjørn Ekrem, Iris Fischer, Andrea Galimberti, et al. "Coverage and quality of DNA barcode references for Central and Northern European Odonata." PeerJ 9 (May 3, 2021): e11192. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11192.

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Background Dragonflies and damselflies (Odonata) are important components in biomonitoring due to their amphibiotic lifecycle and specific habitat requirements. They are charismatic and popular insects, but can be challenging to identify despite large size and often distinct coloration, especially the immature stages. DNA-based assessment tools rely on validated DNA barcode reference libraries evaluated in a supraregional context to minimize taxonomic incongruence and identification mismatches. Methods This study reports on findings from the analysis of the most comprehensive DNA barcode dataset for Central European Odonata to date, with 103 out of 145 recorded European species included and publicly deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). The complete dataset includes 697 specimens (548 adults, 108 larvae) from 274 localities in 16 countries with a geographic emphasis on Central Europe. We used BOLD to generate sequence divergence metrics and to examine the taxonomic composition of the DNA barcode clusters within the dataset and in comparison with all data on BOLD. Results Over 88% of the species included can be readily identified using their DNA barcodes and the reference dataset provided. Considering the complete European dataset, unambiguous identification is hampered in 12 species due to weak mitochondrial differentiation and partial haplotype sharing. However, considering the known species distributions only two groups of five species possibly co-occur, leading to an unambiguous identification of more than 95% of the analysed Odonata via DNA barcoding in real applications. The cases of small interspecific genetic distances and the observed deep intraspecific variation in Cordulia aenea (Linnaeus, 1758) are discussed in detail and the corresponding taxa in the public reference database are highlighted. They should be considered in future applications of DNA barcoding and metabarcoding and represent interesting evolutionary biological questions, which call for in depth analyses of the involved taxa throughout their distribution ranges.
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Mehlhorn, Hendrik, Matthias Lange, Uwe Scholz, and Falk Schreiber. "IDPredictor: predict database links in biomedical database." Journal of Integrative Bioinformatics 9, no. 2 (June 1, 2012): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jib-2012-190.

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Summary Knowledge found in biomedical databases, in particular in Web information systems, is a major bioinformatics resource. In general, this biological knowledge is worldwide represented in a network of databases. These data is spread among thousands of databases, which overlap in content, but differ substantially with respect to content detail, interface, formats and data structure. To support a functional annotation of lab data, such as protein sequences, metabolites or DNA sequences as well as a semi-automated data exploration in information retrieval environments, an integrated view to databases is essential. Search engines have the potential of assisting in data retrieval from these structured sources, but fall short of providing a comprehensive knowledge excerpt out of the interlinked databases. A prerequisit of supporting the concept of an integrated data view is to acquire insights into cross-references among database entities. This issue is being hampered by the fact, that only a fraction of all possible cross-references are explicitely tagged in the particular biomedical informations systems. In this work, we investigate to what extend an automated construction of an integrated data network is possible. We propose a method that predicts and extracts cross-references from multiple life science databases and possible referenced data targets. We study the retrieval quality of our method and report on first, promising results. The method is implemented as the tool IDPredictor, which is published under the DOI 10.5447/IPK/2012/4 and is freely available using the URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.5447/IPK/2012/4.
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39

Krause, G. "From evaluation to continuous quality assurance of surveillance systems." Eurosurveillance 11, no. 11 (November 1, 2006): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.2807/esm.11.11.00657-en.

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Surveillance systems have been described as the nerve cells of public health with afferent arms receiving information, cell bodies analysing the information and efferent arms initiating appropriate action or further distribution of information [1]. Increasing numbers of scientific publications on the methodology and evaluation of surveillance systems seem to underline the importance of surveillance systems in public health. The most often cited references in these publications appear to be the definition of public health surveillance by Thacker and Berkelman [2] and variations thereof, and the recommendations for evaluating surveillance systems from 1988 [3] and its update from 2002 written by working groups at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United States[4].
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40

Lo Buono, Viviana, Francesco Corallo, Placido Bramanti, and Silvia Marino. "Coping strategies and health-related quality of life after stroke." Journal of Health Psychology 22, no. 1 (July 10, 2016): 16–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359105315595117.

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Cerebral stroke causes a significant worsening of health-related quality of life. This review was conducted on studies investigating whether the levels of quality of life were influenced by the coping strategies used by stroke patients. We searched on PubMed and Web of Science databases and screening references of included studies and review articles for additional citations. From initial 389 publications, we included only 6 studies that met search criteria and described the association between coping and quality of life. Results showed that patients who prefer accommodative or active coping strategies had a better quality of life after stroke when compared with patients who adopted assimilative coping.
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41

Adams, Charles F. "An Undergraduate Primer on Quality-Differentiated Demand." American Economist 65, no. 2 (January 12, 2020): 277–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0569434519899354.

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This article presents a student exercise on the logic underlying demand for quality-differentiated products. The argument builds and extends on basic constructs from undergraduate microeconomics, developing a linear demand structure to reflect consumer preferences for quality variation and a brief critique of market responses to those preferences that indicates potentially greater efficiency loses under monopoly once the possibility of quality distortions are accounted for. Various policy extensions are noted. These include applications in utility pricing tied to quality variations in service reliability, the potentially disproportionate impact on lower income households of quality distortions created by monopoly practices, and the potential of profligate resource use by monopolies which are shown to favor higher over lower quality products. Following along with the student exercise is a series of instructor notes with references to the scholarly literature and possible elaborations on various aspects of the exercise that instructors may chose to address. JEL Classifications: D4, D41, D42
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42

Gupta, Vishnu Kumar, and Praveen Babel. "Accuracy of References in Journal Literature of Medical Sciences: A Review." IRA-International Journal of Management & Social Sciences (ISSN 2455-2267) 12, no. 3 (October 10, 2018): 62. http://dx.doi.org/10.21013/jmss.v12.n3.p2.

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This review of literature presents the accuracy level of references in journal articles related to domain of medical science and its allied subjects. Peer-reviewed journals, which are being indexed in international citation databases and possess high impact factor, have reference errors. Not only journal articles but also the PubMed database contains bibliographic errors. Due to faulty references, task of indexing and abstracting of authors and articles in citation databases becomes troublesome. The high level of reference accuracy makes the scientific writings more reliable and useful which further moves towards the high quality scholarship.
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Unterwurzacher, Verena, Clara Pogner, Harald Berger, Joseph Strauss, Sabine Strauss-Goller, and Markus Gorfer. "Validation of a quantitative PCR based detection system for indoor mold exposure assessment in bioaerosols." Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts 20, no. 10 (2018): 1454–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8em00253c.

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Validation of a newly developed qPCR based detection system showed that sample spiking, parallel measurements of known references and final data normalization are crucial for reliability and possible comparison of air quality assessments addressing indoor mold.
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44

Gorgulho, B. M., G. K. Pot, F. M. Sarti, and D. M. Marchioni. "Indices for the assessment of nutritional quality of meals: a systematic review." British Journal of Nutrition 115, no. 11 (April 5, 2016): 2017–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007114516000994.

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AbstractThis systematic review aimed to synthesise information on indices developed to evaluate nutritional quality of meals. A strategy for systematic search of the literature was developed using keywords related to assessment of meal quality. Databases searched included ScienceDirect, PubMed, Lilacs, SciELO, Scopus, Cochrane, Embase and Google Scholar. The literature search resulted in seven different meal quality indices. Each article was analysed in order to identify the following items: authors, country, year, study design, population characteristics, type of meal evaluated, dietary assessment method, characteristics evaluated (nutrients or food items), score range, index components, nutritional references, correlations performed, validation and relationship with an outcome (if existing). Two studies developed instruments to assess the quality of breakfast, three analysed lunch, one evaluated dinner and one was applied to all types of meals and snacks. All meal quality indices reviewed were based on the evaluation of presence or absence of food groups and relative contributions of nutrients, according to food-based guidelines or nutrient references, adapting the daily dietary recommendations to one specific meal. Most of the indices included three items as components for meal quality assessment: (I) total fat or some specific type of fat, (II) fruits and vegetables and (III) cereals or whole grains. This systematic review indicates aspects that need further research, particularly the numerous approaches to assessing meals considering different foods and nutrients, and the need for validation studies of meal indices.
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45

Geng, Qing Xia, Sheng Feng Wang, Hui Min Zhang, Jian Zhang, and Fan Qi Meng. "Optimization of Comprehensive Assessment Parameters System for Equipment Maintenance Quality Based on Principal Component Analysis." Advanced Materials Research 328-330 (September 2011): 2343–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.328-330.2343.

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Testing and optimization of assessment parameters is important process for constructing general, perfect assessment parameters systems. It is emphasis and difficulty for research on parameters system for comprehensive assessment of maintenance quality to test and optimize parameters of comprehensive assessment of maintenance quality. The paper tests and optimizes parameters system for assessment of references [4] by principal component analysis method based on existing statistical data of equipment maintenance of quality management. An instructive research has done on optimization of parameters system for comprehensive assessment of maintenance quality.
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46

Sadikoglu Asan, Hatice, and Ahsen Ozsoy. "The importance of user memory in understanding housing quality." International Journal of Building Pathology and Adaptation 36, no. 4 (August 13, 2018): 427–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijbpa-02-2018-0017.

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Purpose Housing quality is determined by both objective and subjective dynamics. This research was conducted to explore the importance of users’ memory as a tool for assessing housing quality. While objective features of the surroundings generally require physical measurements, subjective features can be supported by residents’ memories. Memory studies can therefore be used as a research tool to understand the housing environment as they provide important references to the past, present, and future. The purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between users’ (residents) memory and housing quality. Design/methodology/approach The methodology comprised a literature review of spatial quality studies and a field study of a modern housing estate in Istanbul. For the field study, housing quality was examined through the memories of residents in the neighbourhood, buildings, and units. With the research, site observations were made, a questionnaire was issued to residents, and in-depth interviews were conducted with residents who had lived there the longest. New dimensions of housing quality problems were then discussed in the conclusion with reference to residents’ memories. Findings Memory studies can be used as a research tool to understand the housing environment, as they provide important references to the past, present and future. In the conclusion, new dimensions of the housing quality problems were discussed with the help of the residents’ memories. It was seen that different dimensions of housing quality can be revealed with the help of user memory. Research limitations/implications In all, 40 of the total residents (101) accepted to make questionnaires. In-depth interviews were conducted with three long-term residents that are the only ones still alive and had lived the area since the beginning of the life after construction. Originality/value With the aim of developing new tools and methods to analyse housing quality, this research presents a new perspective by utilising users’ memories to evaluate spatial quality.
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Alleoni, Ana Cláudia Carraro, and Aloísio José Antunes. "Internal quality of eggs coated with whey protein concentrate." Scientia Agricola 61, no. 3 (June 2004): 276–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0103-90162004000300006.

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The functional properties of foods can be preserved when they are coated with edible films, since both the loss of moisture and the transport of O2 and CO2 are reduced. The objectives of this work were: to compare weight loss, Haugh units, and albumen pH between fresh eggs and eggs coated with whey protein concentrate (WPC), under six storage periods (3, 7, 10, 14, 21 and 28 days), at 25°C. During the entire storage period, regardless of whether the eggs were coated or not, the Haugh unit values and the weight loss decreased, and differences between values from the first to the last period were lower for coated eggs. Albumen pH increased. The Haugh unit values for coated eggs were similar to those found in literature references when the same storage period was considered.
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Abd El Aal, S. F. A., and E. I. Awad. "Bacteriological quality of raw ewe’s and goat’s milk, with special references to foodborne pathogens." Journal of Veterinary Medical Research 18, no. 2 (March 1, 2008): 28–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/jvmr.2008.77832.

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49

Pietruszewski, Stanisław, and Elvira Martínez. "Magnetic field as a method of improving the quality of sowing material: a review." International Agrophysics 29, no. 3 (July 1, 2015): 377–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/intag-2015-0044.

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AbstractThe effect of magnetic field on the growth and yield of crop plants is presented based on 80 references on the studies of many authors. The introduction gives an outline of the history of the effect of magnetic field on biological organisms including plants since the second half of the 19th century. Then the role of static and alternating magnetic fields is discussed in relation to seed germination, root and stem growth, yield, protein and chlorophyll content, rhizosphere community.
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Nelson, W. B. "A Bibliography of Accelerated Test Plans Part II—References." IEEE Transactions on Reliability 54, no. 3 (September 2005): 370–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tr.2005.853289.

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