Kenneth Field
Esri
49 Papers
159 Citations
Kenneth Field is an academic researcher from Esri. The author has contributed to research in topics: Higher education & Reflective practice. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 49 publications. Previous affiliations of Kenneth Field include Northampton Community College & Kingston University.
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Papers
Anaesthetic effects of chloral hydrate, pentobarbitone and urethane in adult male rats
TL;DR: Chloral hydrate, pentobarbitone and urethane were evaluated and compared for onset, duration and depth of anaesthesia, cardiovascular and respiratory effects, nociception and mortality in adult male rats.
203
Hazards of urethane (ethyl carbamate): a review of the literature.
Kenneth Field,C. M. Lang +1 more
TL;DR: Considering the properties urethane demonstrates in animals, the safety of its use by laboratory personnel is in question, but if appropriate guidelines are followed, it should continue to be a useful anaesthetic agent for laboratory animals.
105
Measuring the need for primary health care: an index of relative disadvantage
TL;DR: The IRD developed here is closely correlated with other indices of disadvantage, but its greater breadth and more logical construction mean that it may be more likely to be a more widely applicable instrument for health care planning of resource allocation.
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Time activity modelling of domestic exposures to radon
David J. Briggs,Anthony R Denman,John S. Gulliver,R.F Marley,Christine A. Kennedy,P.S Philips,Kenneth Field,Robin G M Crockett +7 more
TL;DR: Modelled exposures show a non-linear association with total time spent at home, suggesting that exposure estimates based on linear models may provide misleading estimates of health risks from radon and the potential benefits of radon remediation.
61
Cartoblography: Experiments in Using and Organising the Spatial Context of Micro‐blogging
Kenneth Field,James J. O'Brien +1 more
TL;DR: The spatial expression and potential value of micro‐blogging and Twitter as a social networking tool is explored and the value of “cartoblography”– a framework for mapping the spatial context of micro-blogging is demonstrated.
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