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“What should I do when I get home?” treatment plan discussion at discharge between specialist physicians and older in-patients: mixed method study
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)Background During discharge from hospital, older patients and physicians discuss the plan for managing patients’ health at home. If not followed at home, it can result in poor medication management, readmissions, or ... -
What Should I Wear Today? An IoT–Based Dress Assistant for the e–Society
(Lecture Notes in Computer Science;, Chapter, 2018)Technology is turning into an augmentation of our memory and an invisible assistant in our daily lives. These issues arise many challenges but also opportunities for researchers, developers and even, final users. In this ... -
What We Disagree about When We Disagree about Sustainability
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2013)Criteria for sustainability are frequently contested and changed based on competing or new types of knowledge. This is a potential problem for policy and decision makers struggling to come up with policies regarding ... -
What we see is what we get - Seeing Sandhalsan with new "eyes"
(Chapter, 2018)The rock art at Sandhalsan, in Åfjord municipality, has been known since 1931 and has been an important subject for researchers through the years since discovery. Different methods for documentation, different light, ... -
What were we thinking? A scoping review of crisis management pandemic literature (1984–2019)
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2023)Pandemics are now the focus of research attention in the fields of preparedness and crisis management. As pandemics are some of the largest crises to occur, an important question becomes ‘what were the field of crisis ... -
What you extract is what you see: Optimising the preparation of water and wastewater samples for in vitro bioassays
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)The assessment of water quality is crucial for safeguarding drinking water resources and ecosystem integrity. To this end, sample preparation and extraction is critically important, especially when investigating emerging ... -
What's in a word? On the use of metaphors to describe the careers of women academics
(Journal article, 2018)Various metaphors are used in the literature and media to refer to the careers and experiences of women academics. In the wake of the fascinating debate in the literature surrounding the adequacy of these expressions, ... -
The What, Why and How of Child Participation—A Review of the Conceptualization of “Child Participation” in Child Welfare
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021)This review explores the conceptualization of “child participation” in a child welfare context. The analyses are based on the theories, models and concepts researchers apply when framing their studies. Central to the ... -
What’s in a name? Measuring access to social activities with a field experiment
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)Today’s societies increasingly consist of members who migrated from other countries and regions, and their functioning depends heavily on integrating their diverse members. Interactions with the local population through ... -
“‘What’s in a Name?’: Cli-Fi and American Studies.”
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017) -
“What’s in a Name?” Authorship as (Micro)Genre in the Paratext of the Hogarth Shakespeare Project
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)Les adaptations modernes en prose des pièces de Shakespeare ont franchi plusieurs frontières (génériques, culturelles, temporelles) – et les romans commissionnés et publiés au sein du projet Hogarth Shakespeare n’en font ... -
When and How Should Chloride Profiles be Calibrated for Paste Fraction?
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)Due to stochastic and systematic variations in the paste fraction, data for total chloride content are occasionally calibrated using parallelly measured calcium content as a measure of the actual paste fraction − assuming ... -
When Civil Resistance Succeeds: Building Democracy after Popular Nonviolent Uprisings
(Book, 2018)Why do some nonviolent revolutions lead to successful democratization while others fail to consolidate democratic change? And what can activists do to push toward a victory over dictatorship that results in long-term ... -
When delayed responses are productive: Being persuaded following resistance in conversation
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)Conversation analysts have long since demonstrated that, in responding to an initiating action (e.g., question), recipients have at least two ways to respond; response options (e.g., answer, non-answer) are not equivalent, ... -
When Digital Lean Tools Need Continuous Improvement
(Chapter, 2021)Lean practitioners have traditionally been reluctant to automate and digitalize production. Over the last years the combination of lean and digitalization has been actualized in academic publications, but still there are ... -
When DNA barcoding and morphology mesh: Ceratopogonidae diversity in Finnmark, Norway
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2014)DNA barcoding in Ceratopogonidae has been restricted to interpreting the medically and veterinary important members of Culicoides Latreille. Here the technique is utilised, together with morphological study, to interpret ... -
When do allocations and constructs respect material, energy, financial, and production balances in LCA and EEIO?
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2016)Conservation of mass and energy are essential to physical accounting, just as price and market balances are essential to economic accounting. These principles guide data collection and inventory compilation in industrial ... -
When energy justice is contested: A systematic review of a decade of research on Sweden's conflicted energy landscape
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)The way in which we produce and consume energy has profound implications for our societies. How we configure our energy systems determines not only our chances of successfully dealing with climate change but also, how ... -
When farm couples break up: gendered moralities, gossip and the fear of stigmatisation in rural communities
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015)This article draws on interviews with farm women and men who have experienced a family break up to analyse their experiences of gender expectations in family farming, their fear of stigmatisation and their receipt of help ... -
When Fluorescence Is not a Particle: The Tissue Translocation of Microplastics in Daphnia magna Seems an Artifact
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019)Previous research reported the translocation of nano‐ and microplastics from the gastrointestinal tract to tissues in Daphnia magna, most prominently of fluorescent polystyrene beads to lipid droplets. For particles >300 ...