Stein Nilsen
Norwegian Defence Research Establishment
42 Papers
354 Citations
Stein Nilsen is an academic researcher from Norwegian Defence Research Establishment. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photosynthesis & Photorespiration. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 41 publications. Previous affiliations of Stein Nilsen include University of Oslo & University of Bergen.
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Papers
Feedback on video recorded consultations in medical teaching: why students loathe and love it – a focus-group based qualitative study
Stein Nilsen,Anders Baerheim +1 more
TL;DR: Insight is provided regarding the vulnerability of students receiving feedback from videotaped consultations and their need for reassurance and support in the process, and the importance of carefully considering the design and execution of such educational programs is demonstrated.
Considerations made by the general practitioner when dealing with sick-listing of patients suffering from subjective and composite health complaints.
TL;DR: Several factors that might influence decision-making were identified: the patients’ ability to present their story to evoke sympathy, the GP's prior knowledge of the patient, and the GPs’ own experience as a patient and their tendency to avoid conflicts.
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Wavelets applied to simplification of digital terrain models
Jan T. Bj⊘rke,Stein Nilsen +1 more
TL;DR: Wavelet thresholding is used to generate simplified terrain models and the experiments show the smoothing effect of the thresholding, and how the main terrain features survive as the threshold value increases.
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Effect of CO2 enrichment on photosynthesis, growth and yield of tomato
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of CO2 enrichment on the photorespiration of tomato plants was investigated in a tightly-closed greenhouse, where CO2 was enriched continuously during the entire growing period.
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Effect of Temperature on Photoinhibition of Photosynthesis, Recovery, Turnover of the 32 kD Chloroplast Protein in Lemna gibba
Huashi Gong,Stein Nilsen +1 more
TL;DR: In N2, photoinhibition was less temperature-dependent, with increasing photoinhibited at temperatures above 10 °C under a PFD of 1000 p,mol m-2 s-1, but increasing temperature also greatly decreased the recovery rate.
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