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Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens

Honorary Professor

School of Medicine and Public Health (Computer Science and Software Engineering)

Career Summary

Biography

My introduction to academic life was as a postgraduate student and junior academic within the visionary and still unique MONADS project group, which was created and led by Professor J Leslie Keedy. The principles espoused by this project continue to play a dominant role in my approaches to science, and more generally to life. My contribution to MONADS, which was supervised by Dr John Rosenberg and expanded on a seminal idea first published by Professor Keedy and Dr (now Professor) David Abramson, developed and defined a unique way to achieve transparent global distribution of both computation and the data that that computation creates and manages.

I became a PhD-qualified academic at the age of 40. After establishing, with Professor Rosenberg, the very successful and productive Persistent Systems Research Group at the University of Sydney, I left the group in 1995 to return to Newcastle for family reasons. I was then employed by the School of Management, UoN, on a series of short teaching contracts, until being appointed to a full-time position with FEBE in mid 1998. I established inter-disciplinary collaboration with groups in UoN (Mental Health) and QUT (Bioinformatics), achieving substantial results including an international patent. From 2002 I also became heavily involved in University administration as HoD and Assistant Dean, but also resumed work on my previous area of expertise, forming the Distributed Systems Research Group (DCRG) which I led until my retirement in 2017. This work recommenced in parallel with continued collaboration with my colleagues in Mental Health Studies, in recent years has increasingly focused on Health Behaviour, and in creating infrastructure by which our research is able to flourish. Of note is my development with Dr. David Paul and Dr. Mark Wallis of the highly configurable and powerful QuON software system for collection and dissemination of data/information, largely using mobile computing devices. QuON is underpinning an increasingly large number of Medical research projects and interventions at UoN and other institutions. Additionally, I advanced the techniques and ideas on which I commenced work in the early 1990s (and on which I supervised Ph.D students who graduated in 1995 (X2), 1996, 1997, 2005, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 (x2), 2017, 2018, 2019(x2) & 2020 respectively), applying them to grid and Internet-based distribution.

My more recently completed PhD student projects include: "Advances in Cluster Editing: Linear FPT Kernels and Comparative Implementations" - graduated PhD in 2010; "Data Management and Query Processing for Semistructured and Structured Databases" - graduated PhD in 2011; "A Framework to Support Long-Running Web Service Transactions" - graduated PhD in 2012; "Pedagogical-based Learning Object System to Support Self-regulated Learning of Computer Science" - graduated PhD in 2013; "A Software Engineering Process for BDI Multiagent Systems" - graduated PhD in 2014; "Component-based Runtime Environment for Internet Applications" - graduated PhD in 2015; "Reinforcement Learning in Hierarchical Multi-Agent Systems" - graduated PhD in 2015; "A Framework for Clinical Reasoning, Knowledge Acquisition, Retrieval and Synthesis in Psychiatry" - graduated PhD in 2017, "Modelling and Simulation of a New Cloud Computing Platform Based on the SPEEDOS Operating System" - graduated PhD in 2018, "Secure Module Invocation System (SMIS): A Study of Program Execution in a Secure Operating System Environment" - graduated PhD in 2019, "Model-Driven Engineering to Enhance the Reliability of Software Development by Verifying System Properties and Detecting Clones" - graduated PhD in 2019, & "Agent Oriented Smart Factory (AOSF): a MAS based Framework for SMEs under Industry 4.0" - graduated PhD in 2020.

Research Expertise
Research centres on engineering of flexible software systems, bioinformatics, operating systems and computer forensics, distributed and grid computing, resilience and availability in database systems, use of persistent stores for bulk data storage and manipulation, and use of (particularly mobile) computing to investigate and influence health behaviour. 

In 2015 my research supervision was recognised by my receipt of the Vice Chancellors Award for Research Supervision Excellence.

Teaching Expertise
In 2007 my teaching was recognised when I received both the University of Newcastle Vice Chancellor's Award for Teaching Excellence and the Australian College of Educators N.S.W. Quality Teaching Award. 

Administrative Expertise
Head, Discipline of Computer Science & Software Engineering; Deputy Head, School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; Assistant Dean (IT), Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment; Founder & Head, Distributed Computing Research Group. 

Collaborations
Research interests centre on: engineering of flexible (component-based) software systems; the role of distributed systems and mobile computing in study of and effecting change to health behaviour; distributed systems to support understanding & management of schizophrenia; teaching & reinforcing professional decision support skills; bioinformatics; operating systems and computer forensics; distributed and grid computing; resilience and availability in database systems; and use of persistent stores and matching programming languages for bulk data storage and manipulation.


Qualifications

  • PhD, University of Newcastle
  • Diploma in Education, University of Newcastle
  • Diploma of Computer Science, University of Newcastle
  • Bachelor of Mathematics, University of Newcastle

Keywords

  • Bioinformatics
  • Computer Networks
  • Computer Programming
  • Concurrent Programming
  • Data Structures & Algorithms
  • Distributed Computing
  • Distributed Operating Systems
  • Grid Computing
  • Health Behaviour
  • Mental Health
  • Operating Systems
  • Persistent Systems
  • Programming Languages

Professional Experience

Academic appointment

Dates Title Organisation / Department
3/7/2017 -  Honorary Professor School of Medicine & Public Health, Faculty of Health & Medicine, University of Newcastle | Australia
Australia
1/7/2007 - 3/7/2017 Associate Professor University of Newcastle
Engineering & Built Environment
Australia
1/1/2007 -  Membership - Australian College of Educators Australian College of Educators
Australia
1/7/1998 - 1/6/2007 Senior Lecturer University of Newcastle
Engineering & Built Environment
Australia
1/7/1995 - 1/2/1998 Lecturer University of Newcastle
School of Management
Australia
1/1/1995 - 1/6/1995 Head Teacher - Computing St Francis Xavier College
Australia
1/1/1992 - 1/12/1994 Lecturer University of Sydney
Basser Department of Computer Science
1/1/1988 - 1/12/1989 Senior Tutor University of Newcastle
Department of Computer Science
Australia
1/1/1976 - 1/12/1986 Teacher NSW Department of Education
Australia

Awards

Recognition

Year Award
2002 Baden-Wurttemberg Visiting Scholar
University of Ulm
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Publications

For publications that are currently unpublished or in-press, details are shown in italics.


Chapter (7 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2019 Ud Din F, Henskens F, Paul D, Wallis MR, 'Agent-Oriented Smart Factory (AOSF): An MAS Based Framework for SMEs Under Industry 4.0', Agents and Multi-Agent Systems: Technologies and Applications 2018. Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Agents and Multi-Agent Systems: Technologies and Applications (KES-AMSTA-18), Springer International Publishing, Cham, Switzerland 44-54 (2019) [B1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-92031-3_5
Citations Scopus - 10
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2015 Fernando I, Henskens F, Talebian M, Cohen M, 'A Simple Model for Evaluating Medical Treatment Options', Computer and Information Science, Springer, Cham, Switzerland 195-207 (2015) [B1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-10509-3_14
Citations Scopus - 2
2014 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, 'Engineering Flexible Service-Oriented Transactions', Web Information Systems and Technologies, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin 37-52 (2014) [B1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-662-44300-2_3
2013 Fernando I, Henskens F, Cohen M, 'An Approximate Reasoning Model for Medical Diagnosis', Software Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Networking and Parallel/Distributed Computing, Springer International Publishing, Switzerland 11-24 (2013) [B1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-00738-0_2
Citations Scopus - 6
2011 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Peer-based complex profile management', Software Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Networking and Parallel/Distributed Computing 2011, Springer-Verlag, Berlin 103-111 (2011) [B1]
Citations Web of Science - 1
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2002 Keedy JL, Menger G, Heinlein C, Henskens FA, 'Qualifying Types Illustrated by Synchronisation Examples', Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer, Berlin 330-344 (2002)
1988 Broessler P, Henskens FA, Keedy JL, Rosenberg J, 'Addressing Objects in a Very Large Distributed System', Distributed Processing, Elsevier Science Publishers B. V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands 105-116 (1988)
Show 4 more chapters

Journal article (125 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2024 Hess JL, Mattheisen M, Greenwood TA, Tsuang MT, Edenberg HJ, Holmans P, et al., 'A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia: Replication in 18,090 cases and 28,114 controls from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium', American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics, 195 (2024) [C1]
DOI 10.1002/ajmg.b.32957
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns, Paul Tooney, Brian Kelly
2024 Georgiadis F, Larivière S, Glahn D, Hong LE, Kochunov P, Mowry B, et al., 'Connectome architecture shapes large-scale cortical alterations in schizophrenia: a worldwide ENIGMA study.', Mol Psychiatry, (2024) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41380-024-02442-7
Citations Scopus - 1
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns
2024 Koromina M, Ravi A, Panagiotaropoulou G, Schilder BM, Humphrey J, Braun A, et al., 'Fine-mapping genomic loci refines bipolar disorder risk genes.', medRxiv, (2024)
DOI 10.1101/2024.02.12.24302716
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Murray Cairns, Rodney Scott
2024 Boen R, Kaufmann T, van der Meer D, Frei O, Agartz I, Ames D, et al., 'Beyond the Global Brain Differences: Intraindividual Variability Differences in 1q21.1 Distal and 15q11.2 BP1-BP2 Deletion Carriers.', Biol Psychiatry, 95 147-160 (2024) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.08.018
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Rodney Scott, Murray Cairns
2023 Constantinides C, Han LKM, Alloza C, Antonucci LA, Arango C, Ayesa-Arriola R, et al., 'Brain ageing in schizophrenia: evidence from 26 international cohorts via the ENIGMA Schizophrenia consortium.', Mol Psychiatry, 28 1201-1209 (2023) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41380-022-01897-w
Citations Scopus - 16Web of Science - 11
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2023 Omlor W, Rabe F, Fuchs S, Cecere G, Homan S, Surbeck W, et al., 'Estimating multimodal brain variability in schizophrenia spectrum disorders: A worldwide ENIGMA study.', bioRxiv, (2023)
DOI 10.1101/2023.09.22.559032
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns, Carmel Loughland
2023 Schijven D, Postema MC, Fukunaga M, Matsumoto J, Miura K, de Zwarte SMC, et al., 'Large-scale analysis of structural brain asymmetries in schizophrenia via the ENIGMA consortium.', Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 120 e2213880120 (2023) [C1]
DOI 10.1073/pnas.2213880120
Citations Scopus - 10Web of Science - 1
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Ulrich Schall
2023 Hsu YHH, Pintacuda G, Liu R, Nacu E, Kim A, Tsafou K, et al., 'Using brain cell-type-specific protein interactomes to interpret neurodevelopmental genetic signals in schizophrenia', iScience, 26 (2023) [C1]

Genetics have nominated many schizophrenia risk genes and identified convergent signals between schizophrenia and neurodevelopmental disorders. However, functional interpretation ... [more]

Genetics have nominated many schizophrenia risk genes and identified convergent signals between schizophrenia and neurodevelopmental disorders. However, functional interpretation of the nominated genes in the relevant brain cell types is often lacking. We executed interaction proteomics for six schizophrenia risk genes that have also been implicated in neurodevelopment in human induced cortical neurons. The resulting protein network is enriched for common variant risk of schizophrenia in Europeans and East Asians, is down-regulated in layer 5/6 cortical neurons of individuals affected by schizophrenia, and can complement fine-mapping and eQTL data to prioritize additional genes in GWAS loci. A sub-network centered on HCN1 is enriched for common variant risk and contains proteins (HCN4 and AKAP11) enriched for rare protein-truncating mutations in individuals with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Our findings showcase brain cell-type-specific interactomes as an organizing framework to facilitate interpretation of genetic and transcriptomic data in schizophrenia and its related disorders.

DOI 10.1016/j.isci.2023.106701
Citations Scopus - 2
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland
2023 Liu D, Meyer D, Fennessy B, Feng C, Cheng E, Johnson JS, et al., 'Schizophrenia risk conferred by rare protein-truncating variants is conserved across diverse human populations', Nature Genetics, 55 369-376 (2023) [C1]

Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a chronic mental illness and among the most debilitating conditions encountered in medical practice. A recent landmark SCZ study of the protein-coding regio... [more]

Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a chronic mental illness and among the most debilitating conditions encountered in medical practice. A recent landmark SCZ study of the protein-coding regions of the genome identified a causal role for ten genes and a concentration of rare variant signals in evolutionarily constrained genes1. This recent study¿and most other large-scale human genetics studies¿was mainly composed of individuals of European (EUR) ancestry, and the generalizability of the findings in non-EUR populations remains unclear. To address this gap, we designed a custom sequencing panel of 161 genes selected based on the current knowledge of SCZ genetics and sequenced a new cohort of 11,580 SCZ cases and 10,555 controls of diverse ancestries. Replicating earlier work, we found that cases carried a significantly higher burden of rare protein-truncating variants (PTVs) among evolutionarily constrained genes (odds ratio = 1.48; P = 5.4 × 10-6). In meta-analyses with existing datasets totaling up to 35,828 cases and 107,877 controls, this excess burden was largely consistent across five ancestral populations. Two genes (SRRM2 and AKAP11) were newly implicated as SCZ risk genes, and one gene (PCLO) was identified as shared by individuals with SCZ and those with autism. Overall, our results lend robust support to the rare allelic spectrum of the genetic architecture of SCZ being conserved across diverse human populations.

DOI 10.1038/s41588-023-01305-1
Citations Scopus - 12Web of Science - 3
Co-authors Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland
2023 Maury EA, Sherman MA, Genovese G, Gilgenast TG, Kamath T, Burris SJ, et al., 'Schizophrenia-associated somatic copy-number variants from 12,834 cases reveal recurrent NRXN1 and ABCB11 disruptions', Cell Genomics, 3 (2023) [C1]

While germline copy-number variants (CNVs) contribute to schizophrenia (SCZ) risk, the contribution of somatic CNVs (sCNVs)¿present in some but not all cells¿remains unknown. We i... [more]

While germline copy-number variants (CNVs) contribute to schizophrenia (SCZ) risk, the contribution of somatic CNVs (sCNVs)¿present in some but not all cells¿remains unknown. We identified sCNVs using blood-derived genotype arrays from 12,834 SCZ cases and 11,648 controls, filtering sCNVs at loci recurrently mutated in clonal blood disorders. Likely early-developmental sCNVs were more common in cases (0.91%) than controls (0.51%, p = 2.68e-4), with recurrent somatic deletions of exons 1¿5 of the NRXN1 gene in five SCZ cases. Hi-C maps revealed ectopic, allele-specific loops forming between a potential cryptic promoter and non-coding cis-regulatory elements upon 5' deletions in NRXN1. We also observed recurrent intragenic deletions of ABCB11, encoding a transporter implicated in anti-psychotic response, in five treatment-resistant SCZ cases and showed that ABCB11 is specifically enriched in neurons forming mesocortical and mesolimbic dopaminergic projections. Our results indicate potential roles of sCNVs in SCZ risk.

DOI 10.1016/j.xgen.2023.100356
Citations Scopus - 4
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Murray Cairns, Paul Tooney
2022 Mullins N, Kang J, Campos A, Coleman JR, Edwards AC, Galfalvy H, et al., 'Dissecting the Shared Genetic Architecture of Suicide Attempt, Psychiatric Disorders, and Known Risk Factors', BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 91 313-327 (2022) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.05.029
Citations Scopus - 92Web of Science - 56
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Murray Cairns, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2022 Trubetskoy V, Pardiñas AF, Qi T, Panagiotaropoulou G, Awasthi S, Bigdeli TB, et al., 'Mapping genomic loci implicates genes and synaptic biology in schizophrenia', Nature, 604 502-508 (2022) [C1]

Schizophrenia has a heritability of 60¿80%1, much of which is attributable to common risk alleles. Here, in a two-stage genome-wide association study of up to 76,755 individuals w... [more]

Schizophrenia has a heritability of 60¿80%1, much of which is attributable to common risk alleles. Here, in a two-stage genome-wide association study of up to 76,755 individuals with schizophrenia and 243,649 control individuals, we report common variant associations at 287 distinct genomic loci. Associations were concentrated in genes that are expressed in excitatory and inhibitory neurons of the central nervous system, but not in other tissues or cell types. Using fine-mapping and functional genomic data, we identify 120 genes (106 protein-coding) that are likely to underpin associations at some of these loci, including 16 genes with credible causal non-synonymous or untranslated region variation. We also implicate fundamental processes related to neuronal function, including synaptic organization, differentiation and transmission. Fine-mapped candidates were enriched for genes associated with rare disruptive coding variants in people with schizophrenia, including the glutamate receptor subunit GRIN2A and transcription factor SP4, and were also enriched for genes implicated by such variants in neurodevelopmental disorders. We identify biological processes relevant to schizophrenia pathophysiology; show convergence of common and rare variant associations in schizophrenia and neurodevelopmental disorders; and provide a resource of prioritized genes and variants to advance mechanistic studies.

DOI 10.1038/s41586-022-04434-5
Citations Scopus - 687Web of Science - 524
Co-authors Pat Michie, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney
2022 Patel Y, Shin J, Abe C, Agartz I, Alloza C, Alnaes D, et al., 'Virtual Ontogeny of Cortical Growth Preceding Mental Illness', BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 92 299-313 (2022) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.02.959
Citations Scopus - 10Web of Science - 5
Co-authors Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Ulrich Schall
2022 Blokland GAM, Grove J, Chen C-Y, Cotsapas C, Tobet S, Handa R, et al., 'Sex-Dependent Shared and Nonshared Genetic Architecture Across Mood and Psychotic Disorders.', Biol Psychiatry, 91 102-117 (2022) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.02.972
Citations Scopus - 46Web of Science - 13
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns, Paul Tooney, Brian Kelly, Carmel Loughland
2022 Ud Din F, Paul D, Henskens F, Wallis M, Hashmi MA, 'AOSR: an agent oriented storage and retrieval WMS planner for SMEs, associated with AOSF framework, under Industry 4.0', International Journal of Applied Decision Sciences, 15 641-661 (2022) [C1]

The concept of a smart factory, under Industry 4.0 relies heavily on cyber physical systems (CPS) and intra-enterprise-wide-networks (IWN). Cloud-based implementation is incumbent... [more]

The concept of a smart factory, under Industry 4.0 relies heavily on cyber physical systems (CPS) and intra-enterprise-wide-networks (IWN). Cloud-based implementation is incumbent to accomplish the promises of enterprise integration, automation, seamless information exchange and intelligent self-organisation. Extensive research has been conducted in this domain, however, there is still much research to be done from the perspective of such frameworks in small to medium size enterprises (SMEs). In this context, the agent-oriented smart factory (AOSF) framework provides a generic end-to-end supply chain (SC) model, compliant with CPS and Industry 4.0 standards. In order to support the crucial side of warehouse management, this paper presents AOSF¿s recommended agent-oriented storage and retrieval (AOSR) warehouse planner with hybrid logic-based strategy, which yields a smart time-stamped plan to manage product placement and retrieval efficiently. The AOSF-associated AOSR-planner uses the hierarchical task network (HTN) AI planning to ensure different warehouse operations in a timely manner.

DOI 10.1504/IJADS.2022.125487
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2021 Jnanamurthy HK, Henskens F, Paul D, Wallis M, 'Formal specification at model-level of model-driven engineering using modelling techniques', International Journal of Computer Applications in Technology, 67 340-350 (2021) [C1]

Nowadays Model-Driven Engineering (MDE) is gaining more popularity due to high-level development leading to a faster generation of executable code, which reduces manual interventi... [more]

Nowadays Model-Driven Engineering (MDE) is gaining more popularity due to high-level development leading to a faster generation of executable code, which reduces manual intervention. Verification is crucial at different levels of model-based development. Model-based development, along with formal verification process, assures the developed model satisfies software requirements described in formal specifications. Owing the inadequate knowledge of formal methods (complex mathematical theory), software developers are not adopting formal methods during software development. There are several approaches in the literature available to transform MDE models into formal models directly for formal verification, and these approaches require an additional input of formal specifications to verification tools for formal verification. But these methods have not addressed the problem of formal specifications at the model level. In this paper, we design a modelling framework using modelling techniques, which allows specifying formal properties at the model level, automatically extracting formal specifications and formal models from developed application models, which are used for formal verification. The proposed method allows full automation and reduces the time for formal verification process during the development life-cycle. Furthermore, the method reduces the complexity of learning formal specification notations (specifications specified at the model level are automatically converted into formal specifications), which are required to input verification tools for formal verification.

DOI 10.1504/IJCAT.2021.122345
Citations Scopus - 1
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2021 Hess JL, Tylee DS, Mattheisen M, Børglum AD, Als TD, Grove J, et al., 'A polygenic resilience score moderates the genetic risk for schizophrenia', Molecular Psychiatry, 26 800-815 (2021) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41380-019-0463-8
Citations Scopus - 34
Co-authors Pat Michie, Brian Kelly, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Murray Cairns
2021 Ud Din F, Paul D, Ryan J, Henskens F, Wallis M, 'Aosr 2.0: A novel approach and thorough validation of an agent-oriented storage and retrieval wms planner for smes, under industry 4.0', Future Internet, 13 (2021) [C1]

The Fourth Industrial Revolution (Industry 4.0), with the help of cyber-physical systems (CPS), the Internet of Things (IoT), and Artificial Intelligence (AI), is transforming the... [more]

The Fourth Industrial Revolution (Industry 4.0), with the help of cyber-physical systems (CPS), the Internet of Things (IoT), and Artificial Intelligence (AI), is transforming the way industrial setups are designed. Recent literature has provided insight about large firms gaining benefits from Industry 4.0, but many of these benefits do not translate to SMEs. The agent-oriented smart factory (AOSF) framework provides a solution to help bridge the gap between Industry 4.0 frameworks and SME-oriented setups by providing a general and high-level supply chain (SC) framework and an associated agent-oriented storage and retrieval (AOSR)-based warehouse management strategy. This paper presents the extended heuristics of the AOSR algorithm and details how it improves the performance efficiency in an SME-oriented warehouse. A detailed discussion on the thorough validation via scenario-based experimentation and test cases explain how AOSR yielded 60¿148% improved performance metrics in certain key areas of a warehouse.

DOI 10.3390/fi13060155
Citations Scopus - 7Web of Science - 3
Co-authors Joe Ryan, Mark Wallis
2021 Ni G, Zeng J, Revez JA, Wang Y, Zheng Z, Ge T, et al., 'A Comparison of Ten Polygenic Score Methods for Psychiatric Disorders Applied Across Multiple Cohorts', BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 90 611-620 (2021) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2021.04.018
Citations Scopus - 76Web of Science - 34
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie
2021 Wall NG, Smith O, Campbell LE, Loughland C, Wallis M, Henskens F, Schall U, 'E-technology social support programs for autistic children: Can they work?', WORLD JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 11 1239-1246 (2021) [C1]
DOI 10.5498/wjp.v11.i12.1239
Citations Web of Science - 3
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Mark Wallis, Linda E Campbell
2021 Ud Din F, Paul D, Henskens F, Wallis M, 'Conceptualised Visualisation of Extended Agent Oriented Smart Factory (xAOSF) Framework with Associated AOSR-WMS System', Journal of Software, 182-199 (2021) [C1]
DOI 10.17706/jsw.16.4.182-199
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2021 Mullins N, Forstner AJ, O'Connell KS, Coombes B, Coleman JR, Qiao Z, et al., 'Genome-wide association study of more than 40,000 bipolar disorder cases provides new insights into the underlying biology', NATURE GENETICS, 53 817-+ (2021) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41588-021-00857-4
Citations Scopus - 453Web of Science - 394
Co-authors Murray Cairns, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2020 Ud Din F, Paul D, Henskens F, Wallis M, 'Validating Time Efficiency of AOSR 2.0: A Novel WMS Planner Algorithm for SMEs, under Industry 4.0', Journal of Software, 15 53-61 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.17706/jsw.15.2.53-61
Co-authors Joe Ryan, Mark Wallis
2020 Stevenson W, Bryant J, Watson R, Sanson-Fisher R, Oldmeadow C, Henskens F, et al., 'A multi-center randomized controlled trial to reduce unmet needs, depression, and anxiety among hematological cancer patients and their support persons', Journal of Psychosocial Oncology, 38 272-292 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1080/07347332.2019.1692991
Citations Scopus - 20Web of Science - 15
Co-authors Anoop Enjeti, Jamie Bryant, Flora Tzelepis, Chris Paul, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Catherine Deste, Christopher Oldmeadow
2020 Grasby KL, Jahanshad N, Painter JN, Colodro-Conde L, Bralten J, Hibar DP, et al., 'The genetic architecture of the human cerebral cortex', SCIENCE, 367 1340-+ (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1126/science.aay6690
Citations Scopus - 386Web of Science - 343
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, William Reay Uon, Rodney Scott, Murray Cairns, Pat Michie
2020 Carey M, Sanson-Fisher R, Zwar N, Mazza D, Meadows G, Piterman L, et al., 'Improving depression outcomes among Australian primary care patients: protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial', BMJ OPEN, 10 (2020)
DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032057
Citations Scopus - 4
Co-authors Rob Sanson-Fisher, Christopher Oldmeadow, Brian Kelly, Mariko Carey
2020 Jnanamurthy HK, Jetley R, Henskens F, Paul D, Wallis M, Sudarsan SD, 'Multi-level analysis of IEC 61131-3 languages to detect clones', International Journal of Computer Applications in Technology, 63 286-299 (2020) [C1]

Nowadays, automation can be assisted by using programmable logic controllers (PLCs). PLCs are typically programmed with IEC 61131-3 languages to automate and implement the applica... [more]

Nowadays, automation can be assisted by using programmable logic controllers (PLCs). PLCs are typically programmed with IEC 61131-3 languages to automate and implement the applications. PLC program classification plays an important role in the identification of similar functionality, which can be considered as software clones. In this paper, we present work to identify clones in IEC 61131-3 languages, using an approach based on four different perspectives: (a) clone prediction: Filtering based on heuristics; (b) structural analysis: Detect syntactic code clones; (c) semantic analysis: Analysis of output variable dependency and input variable impact usage to detect semantic clones; (d) variable interval analysis: Analysis of each program variable intervals to examine and detect clones. Our approach is a combination of structural, semantic and data interval based analysis. As a result, our approach is feasible and yields good results in detecting clones on our test data.

DOI 10.1504/IJCAT.2020.110413
Citations Scopus - 1Web of Science - 1
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2020 Kamitaki N, Sekar A, Handsaker RE, de Rivera H, Tooley K, Morris DL, et al., 'Complement genes contribute sex-biased vulnerability in diverse disorders', Nature, 582 577-581 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41586-020-2277-x
Citations Scopus - 138Web of Science - 125
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Murray Cairns, Ulrich Schall, Brian Kelly, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2020 Radua J, Vieta E, Shinohara R, Kochunov P, Quidé Y, Green MJ, et al., 'Increased power by harmonizing structural MRI site differences with the ComBat batch adjustment method in ENIGMA', NeuroImage, 218 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116956
Citations Scopus - 105Web of Science - 70
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott, Paul Tooney, Murray Cairns, Pat Michie
2020 Liu X, Low SK, Atkins JR, Wu JQ, Reay WR, Cairns HM, et al., 'Wnt receptor gene FZD1 was associated with schizophrenia in genome-wide SNP analysis of the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank cohort', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 54 902-908 (2020) [C1]

Objectives: Large-scale genetic analysis of common variation in schizophrenia has been a powerful approach to understanding this complex but highly heritable psychotic disorder. T... [more]

Objectives: Large-scale genetic analysis of common variation in schizophrenia has been a powerful approach to understanding this complex but highly heritable psychotic disorder. To further investigate loci, genes and pathways associated more specifically in the well-characterized Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank cohort, we applied genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism analysis in these three annotation categories. Methods: We performed a case¿control genome-wide association study in 429 schizophrenia samples and 255 controls. Post-genome-wide association study analyses were then integrated with genomic annotations to explore the enrichment of variation at the gene and pathway level. We also examine candidate single-nucleotide polymorphisms with potential function within expression quantitative trait loci and investigate overall enrichment of variation within tissue-specific functional regulatory domains of the genome. Results: The strongest finding (p = 2.01 × 10-6, odds ratio = 1.82, 95% confidence interval = [1.42, 2.33]) in genome-wide association study was with rs10252923 at 7q21.13, downstream of FZD1 (frizzled class receptor 1). While this did not stand alone after correction, the involvement of FZD1 was supported by gene-based analysis, which exceeded the threshold for genome-wide significance (p = 2.78 × 10-6). Conclusion: The identification of FZD1, as an independent association signal at the gene level, supports the hypothesis that the Wnt signalling pathway is altered in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and may be an important target for therapeutic development.

DOI 10.1177/0004867419885443
Citations Scopus - 8Web of Science - 7
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns, Ulrich Schall, William Reay Uon
2020 Levi CR, Attia JA, D'Este C, Ryan AE, Henskens F, Kerr E, et al., 'Cluster-Randomized Trial of Thrombolysis Implementation Support in Metropolitan and Regional Australian Stroke Centers: Lessons for Individual and Systems Behavior Change', JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, 9 (2020) [C1]
DOI 10.1161/JAHA.119.012732
Citations Scopus - 16Web of Science - 11
Co-authors Alice Grady, Christopher Levi, Chris Paul, John Attia, Mark Parsons, Christopher Oldmeadow, Rob Sanson-Fisher
2019 Lee PH, Anttila V, Won H, Feng YCA, Rosenthal J, Zhu Z, et al., 'Genomic Relationships, Novel Loci, and Pleiotropic Mechanisms across Eight Psychiatric Disorders', Cell, 179 1469-1482.e11 (2019) [C1]

Genetic influences on psychiatric disorders transcend diagnostic boundaries, suggesting substantial pleiotropy of contributing loci. However, the nature and mechanisms of these pl... [more]

Genetic influences on psychiatric disorders transcend diagnostic boundaries, suggesting substantial pleiotropy of contributing loci. However, the nature and mechanisms of these pleiotropic effects remain unclear. We performed analyses of 232,964 cases and 494,162 controls from genome-wide studies of anorexia nervosa, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder, major depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, schizophrenia, and Tourette syndrome. Genetic correlation analyses revealed a meaningful structure within the eight disorders, identifying three groups of inter-related disorders. Meta-analysis across these eight disorders detected 109 loci associated with at least two psychiatric disorders, including 23 loci with pleiotropic effects on four or more disorders and 11 loci with antagonistic effects on multiple disorders. The pleiotropic loci are located within genes that show heightened expression in the brain throughout the lifespan, beginning prenatally in the second trimester, and play prominent roles in neurodevelopmental processes. These findings have important implications for psychiatric nosology, drug development, and risk prediction.

DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2019.11.020
Citations Scopus - 677Web of Science - 552
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns, Peter Schofield, Rodney Scott
2019 Rammos A, Gonzalez LAN, Weinberger DR, Mitchell KJ, Nicodemus KK, 'The role of polygenic risk score gene-set analysis in the context of the omnigenic model of schizophrenia', NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 44 1562-1569 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41386-019-0410-z
Citations Web of Science - 16
Co-authors Pat Michie, Brian Kelly, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Murray Cairns, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall
2019 Huckins LM, Dobbyn A, Ruderfer DM, Hoffman G, Wang W, Pardiñas AF, et al., 'Gene expression imputation across multiple brain regions provides insights into schizophrenia risk', Nature Genetics, 51 659-674 (2019) [C1]

Transcriptomic imputation approaches combine eQTL reference panels with large-scale genotype data in order to test associations between disease and gene expression. These genic as... [more]

Transcriptomic imputation approaches combine eQTL reference panels with large-scale genotype data in order to test associations between disease and gene expression. These genic associations could elucidate signals in complex genome-wide association study (GWAS) loci and may disentangle the role of different tissues in disease development. We used the largest eQTL reference panel for the dorso-lateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) to create a set of gene expression predictors and demonstrate their utility. We applied DLPFC and 12 GTEx-brain predictors to 40,299 schizophrenia cases and 65,264 matched controls for a large transcriptomic imputation study of schizophrenia. We identified 413 genic associations across 13 brain regions. Stepwise conditioning identified 67 non-MHC genes, of which 14 did not fall within previous GWAS loci. We identified 36 significantly enriched pathways, including hexosaminidase-A deficiency, and multiple porphyric disorder pathways. We investigated developmental expression patterns among the 67 non-MHC genes and identified specific groups of pre- and postnatal expression.

DOI 10.1038/s41588-019-0364-4
Citations Scopus - 120Web of Science - 113
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland
2019 Huckins LM, Dobbyn A, Ruderfer DM, Hoffman G, Wang W, Pardinas AF, et al., 'Gene expression imputation across multiple brain regions provides insights into schizophrenia risk (vol 51, pg 659, 2019)', NATURE GENETICS, 51 1068-1068 (2019)
DOI 10.1038/s41588-019-0435-6
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 2
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall
2019 Pouget JG, Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Han B, Wu Y, Mignot E, Ollila HM, et al., 'Cross-disorder analysis of schizophrenia and 19 immune-mediated diseases identifies shared genetic risk.', Human molecular genetics, 28 3498-3513 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1093/hmg/ddz145
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Murray Cairns, Brian Kelly, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney
2019 Mansfield E, Bryant J, Carey M, Turon H, Henskens F, Grady A, 'Getting the right fit: Convergence between preferred and perceived involvement in treatment decision making among medical oncology outpatients.', Health science reports, 2 e101 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1002/hsr2.101
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 2
Co-authors Alice Grady, Heidi Turon, Jamie Bryant, Mariko Carey, Elise Mansfield
2019 Harold D, Connolly S, Riley BP, Kendler KS, McCarthy SE, McCombie WR, et al., 'Population-based identity-by-descent mapping combined with exome sequencing to detect rare risk variants for schizophrenia', American Journal of Medical Genetics, Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics, 180 223-231 (2019) [C1]

Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) are highly effective at identifying common risk variants for schizophrenia. Rare risk variants are also important contributors to schizophr... [more]

Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) are highly effective at identifying common risk variants for schizophrenia. Rare risk variants are also important contributors to schizophrenia etiology but, with the exception of large copy number variants, are difficult to detect with GWAS. Exome and genome sequencing, which have accelerated the study of rare variants, are expensive so alternative methods are needed to aid detection of rare variants. Here we re-analyze an Irish schizophrenia GWAS dataset (n = 3,473) by performing identity-by-descent (IBD) mapping followed by exome sequencing of individuals identified as sharing risk haplotypes to search for rare risk variants in coding regions. We identified 45 rare haplotypes (>1 cM) that were significantly more common in cases than controls. By exome sequencing 105 haplotype carriers, we investigated these haplotypes for functional coding variants that could be tested for association in independent GWAS samples. We identified one rare missense variant in PCNT but did not find statistical support for an association with schizophrenia in a replication analysis. However, IBD mapping can prioritize both individual samples and genomic regions for follow-up analysis but genome rather than exome sequencing may be more effective at detecting risk variants on rare haplotypes.

DOI 10.1002/ajmg.b.32716
Citations Scopus - 2Web of Science - 2
Co-authors Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall
2019 van Erp TGM, Walton E, Hibar DP, Schmaal L, Jiang W, Glahn DC, et al., 'Reply to: New Meta- and Mega-analyses of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings in Schizophrenia: Do They Really Increase Our Knowledge About the Nature of the Disease Process?', BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 85 E35-E39 (2019)
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.10.003
Citations Scopus - 2Web of Science - 2
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Murray Cairns, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall
2019 Paul C, D'Este C, Ryan A, Jayakody A, Attia J, Oldmeadow C, et al., 'Staff perspectives from Australian hospitals seeking to improve implementation of thrombolysis care for acute stroke', SAGE OPEN MEDICINE, 7 (2019) [C1]
DOI 10.1177/2050312119865656
Citations Scopus - 7Web of Science - 5
Co-authors Catherine Deste, Alice Grady, John Attia, Christopher Levi, Chris Paul, Christopher Oldmeadow
2018 LeBlanc M, Zuber V, Thompson WK, Andreassen OA, Frigessi A, Andreassen BK, 'A correction for sample overlap in genome-wide association studies in a polygenic pleiotropy-informed framework', BMC GENOMICS, 19 (2018)
DOI 10.1186/s12864-018-4859-7
Citations Scopus - 24Web of Science - 12
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Murray Cairns, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Brian Kelly, Ulrich Schall
2018 Ni G, Gratten J, Wray NR, Lee SH, Ripke S, Neale BM, et al., 'Age at first birth in women is genetically associated with increased risk of schizophrenia', Scientific Reports, 8 (2018) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/s41598-018-28160-z
Citations Scopus - 14Web of Science - 13
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2018 Kelly S, Jahanshad N, Zalesky A, Kochunov P, Agartz I, Alloza C, et al., 'Widespread white matter microstructural differences in schizophrenia across 4322 individuals: results from the ENIGMA Schizophrenia DTI Working Group.', Molecular psychiatry, 23 1261-1269 (2018) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/mp.2017.170
Citations Scopus - 431Web of Science - 360
Co-authors Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Ulrich Schall
2018 van Erp TGM, Walton E, Hibar DP, Schmaal L, Jiang W, Glahn DC, et al., 'Cortical Brain Abnormalities in 4474 Individuals With Schizophrenia and 5098 Control Subjects via the Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics Through Meta Analysis (ENIGMA) Consortium', Biological Psychiatry, 84 644-654 (2018) [C1]

Background: The profile of cortical neuroanatomical abnormalities in schizophrenia is not fully understood, despite hundreds of published structural brain imaging studies. This st... [more]

Background: The profile of cortical neuroanatomical abnormalities in schizophrenia is not fully understood, despite hundreds of published structural brain imaging studies. This study presents the first meta-analysis of cortical thickness and surface area abnormalities in schizophrenia conducted by the ENIGMA (Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta Analysis) Schizophrenia Working Group. Methods: The study included data from 4474 individuals with schizophrenia (mean age, 32.3 years; range, 11¿78 years; 66% male) and 5098 healthy volunteers (mean age, 32.8 years; range, 10¿87 years; 53% male) assessed with standardized methods at 39 centers worldwide. Results: Compared with healthy volunteers, individuals with schizophrenia have widespread thinner cortex (left/right hemisphere: Cohen's d = -0.530/-0.516) and smaller surface area (left/right hemisphere: Cohen's d = -0.251/-0.254), with the largest effect sizes for both in frontal and temporal lobe regions. Regional group differences in cortical thickness remained significant when statistically controlling for global cortical thickness, suggesting regional specificity. In contrast, effects for cortical surface area appear global. Case-control, negative, cortical thickness effect sizes were two to three times larger in individuals receiving antipsychotic medication relative to unmedicated individuals. Negative correlations between age and bilateral temporal pole thickness were stronger in individuals with schizophrenia than in healthy volunteers. Regional cortical thickness showed significant negative correlations with normalized medication dose, symptom severity, and duration of illness and positive correlations with age at onset. Conclusions: The findings indicate that the ENIGMA meta-analysis approach can achieve robust findings in clinical neuroscience studies; also, medication effects should be taken into account in future genetic association studies of cortical thickness in schizophrenia.

DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.04.023
Citations Scopus - 484Web of Science - 352
Co-authors Murray Cairns, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland
2018 Carey M, Sanson-Fisher R, Clinton-McHarg T, Boyes A, Olver I, Oldmeadow C, et al., 'Examining variation across treatment clinics in cancer patients psychological outcomes: results of a cross sectional survey', Supportive Care in Cancer, 26 3201-3208 (2018) [C1]

Purpose: The majority of research on psychological outcomes for cancer patients has focussed on the role of individual characteristics, and disease and treatment factors. There ha... [more]

Purpose: The majority of research on psychological outcomes for cancer patients has focussed on the role of individual characteristics, and disease and treatment factors. There has been very little exploration of the potential contribution of the treatment clinic to these outcomes. This study explored whether there is variation among clinics in cancer patients¿ psychological outcomes. Methods: Cancer outpatients were recruited from 22 medical oncology and haematology clinics in Australia. Participants completed a pen and paper survey including the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), as well as sociodemographic, disease and treatment characteristics. Results: Of those eligible to participate, 4233 (82%) consented and 2811 (81% of consenters) returned the completed survey. There was no statistically significant variation in HADS depression scores across clinics. Some difference in anxiety scores derived from the HADS questionnaire between clinics (p = 0.03) was found with the percentage of between-clinic variation estimated to be 1.11%. However, once all demographic, disease and treatment predictors were adjusted for there was no statistical differences between clinics (percent of between-clinic variation = 0.53%; p = 0.1415). Conclusions: Psychological outcomes were not found to vary between clinics. Other sources of variation including patient characteristics may over-ride between-clinic variability, if it exists.

DOI 10.1007/s00520-018-4188-z
Citations Scopus - 4Web of Science - 4
Co-authors Allison Boyes, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Christopher Oldmeadow, Chris Paul, Catherine Deste, Mariko Carey
2018 Anttila V, Bulik-Sullivan B, Finucane HK, Walters RK, Bras J, Duncan L, et al., 'Analysis of shared heritability in common disorders of the brain', Science, 360 (2018) [C1]
DOI 10.1126/science.aap8757
Citations Scopus - 1248Web of Science - 927
Co-authors Murray Cairns, Liz Holliday, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, John Attia
2018 Ruderfer DM, Ripke S, McQuillin A, Boocock J, Stahl EA, Pavlides JMW, et al., 'Genomic Dissection of Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia, Including 28 Subphenotypes', Cell, 173 1705-1715.e16 (2018) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2018.05.046
Citations Scopus - 412Web of Science - 333
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns, Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall
2018 Ni G, Moser G, Ripke S, Neale BM, Corvin A, Walters JTR, et al., 'Estimation of Genetic Correlation via Linkage Disequilibrium Score Regression and Genomic Restricted Maximum Likelihood', American Journal of Human Genetics, 102 1185-1194 (2018) [C1]

Genetic correlation is a key population parameter that describes the shared genetic architecture of complex traits and diseases. It can be estimated by current state-of-art method... [more]

Genetic correlation is a key population parameter that describes the shared genetic architecture of complex traits and diseases. It can be estimated by current state-of-art methods, i.e., linkage disequilibrium score regression (LDSC) and genomic restricted maximum likelihood (GREML). The massively reduced computing burden of LDSC compared to GREML makes it an attractive tool, although the accuracy (i.e., magnitude of standard errors) of LDSC estimates has not been thoroughly studied. In simulation, we show that the accuracy of GREML is generally higher than that of LDSC. When there is genetic heterogeneity between the actual sample and reference data from which LD scores are estimated, the accuracy of LDSC decreases further. In real data analyses estimating the genetic correlation between schizophrenia (SCZ) and body mass index, we show that GREML estimates based on ~150,000 individuals give a higher accuracy than LDSC estimates based on ~400,000 individuals (from combined meta-data). A GREML genomic partitioning analysis reveals that the genetic correlation between SCZ and height is significantly negative for regulatory regions, which whole genome or LDSC approach has less power to detect. We conclude that LDSC estimates should be carefully interpreted as there can be uncertainty about homogeneity among combined meta-datasets. We suggest that any interesting findings from massive LDSC analysis for a large number of complex traits should be followed up, where possible, with more detailed analyses with GREML methods, even if sample sizes are lesser.

DOI 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.03.021
Citations Scopus - 91Web of Science - 56
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Pat Michie
2017 Le Hellard S, Wang Y, Witoelar A, Zuber V, Bettella F, Hugdahl K, et al., 'Identification of Gene Loci That Overlap Between Schizophrenia and Educational Attainment', Schizophrenia Bulletin, 43 654-664 (2017) [C1]
DOI 10.1093/schbul/sbw085
Citations Web of Science - 41
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns
2017 Paul CL, Cox ME, Small HJ, Boyes AW, O'Brien L, Rose SK, et al., 'Techniques for Improving Communication of Emotional Content in Text-Only Web-Based Therapeutic Communications: Systematic Review', JMIR MENTAL HEALTH, 4
DOI 10.2196/mental.6707
Citations Web of Science - 5
Co-authors Allison Boyes, Amanda Baker, Chris Paul
2017 Fernando DAIP, Henskens FA, Talebian M, 'Evaluating complex medical treatment options: a case report', Australasian Psychiatry, (2017)
DOI 10.1177/1039856216672559
Citations Web of Science - 1
2017 Klauser P, Baker ST, Cropley VL, Bousman C, Fornito A, Cocchi L, et al., 'White Matter Disruptions in Schizophrenia Are Spatially Widespread and Topologically Converge on Brain Network Hubs', Schizophrenia Bulletin, 43 425-435 (2017) [C1]

White matter abnormalities associated with schizophrenia have been widely reported, although the consistency of findings across studies is moderate. In this study, neuroimaging wa... [more]

White matter abnormalities associated with schizophrenia have been widely reported, although the consistency of findings across studies is moderate. In this study, neuroimaging was used to investigate white matter pathology and its impact on whole-brain white matter connectivity in one of the largest samples of patients with schizophrenia. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) were compared between patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (n = 326) and age-matched healthy controls (n = 197). Between-group differences in FA and MD were assessed using voxel-based analysis and permutation testing. Automated whole-brain white matter fiber tracking and the network-based statistic were used to characterize the impact of white matter pathology on the connectome and its rich club. Significant reductions in FA associated with schizophrenia were widespread, encompassing more than 40% (234ml) of cerebral white matter by volume and involving all cerebral lobes. Significant increases in MD were also widespread and distributed similarly. The corpus callosum, cingulum, and thalamic radiations exhibited the most extensive pathology according to effect size. More than 50% of cortico-cortical and cortico-subcortical white matter fiber bundles comprising the connectome were disrupted in schizophrenia. Connections between hub regions comprising the rich club were disproportionately affected. Pathology did not differ between patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder and was not mediated by medication. In conclusion, although connectivity between cerebral hubs is most extensively disturbed in schizophrenia, white matter pathology is widespread, affecting all cerebral lobes and the cerebellum, leading to disruptions in the majority of the brain's fiber bundles.

DOI 10.1093/schbul/sbw100
Citations Scopus - 86Web of Science - 72
Co-authors Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland
2017 Marshall CR, Howrigan DP, Merico D, Thiruvahindrapuram B, Wu W, Greer DS, et al., 'Contribution of copy number variants to schizophrenia from a genome-wide study of 41,321 subjects', Nature Genetics, 49 27-35 (2017) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/ng.3725
Citations Scopus - 661Web of Science - 536
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns, Pat Michie
2017 McCrabb S, Balogh Z, Baker AL, Harris IA, Attia J, Lott N, et al., 'Development of an online smoking cessation program for use in hospital and following discharge: Smoke-free recovery', BMJ Innovations, 3 115-122 (2017) [C1]

Background Tobacco smoking can have negative health outcomes on recovery from surgery. Although it is recommended best practice to provide patients with advice to quit and follow-... [more]

Background Tobacco smoking can have negative health outcomes on recovery from surgery. Although it is recommended best practice to provide patients with advice to quit and follow-up support, provision of postdischarge support is rare. Developing an online smoking cessation program may help address this gap. Objectives This paper describes the development and pretesting of an online smoking cessation program (smoke-free recovery, SFR) tailored to the orthopaedic trauma population for use while in hospital and post-discharge. Methods Drawing on the DoTTI framework for developing an online program, the following steps were followed for program development: (1) design and development; (2) testing early iteration; (3) testing for effectiveness and (4) integration and implementation. This article describes the first two stages of SFR program development. Results SFR is a 10-module online smoking cessation program tailored for patients with orthopaedic trauma. Of the participants who completed testing early iterations, none reported any difficulties orientating themselves to the program or understanding program content. The main themes were that it was ¿helpful¿, provision of ¿help to quit¿ was low and SFR increased thoughts of ¿staying quit post discharge¿. Conclusions This study found that a theory and evidence-based approach as the basis for an online smoking cessation program for patients with orthopaedic trauma was acceptable to users. A randomised controlled trial will be conducted to examine whether the online smoking cessation program is effective in increasing smoking cessation and how it can be integrated and implemented into hospital practice (stages three and four of the DoTTI framework).

DOI 10.1136/bmjinnov-2016-000126
Citations Scopus - 2
Co-authors Sam Mccrabb, Billie Bonevski, Amanda Baker, John Attia, Zsolt Balogh, Mark Wallis, Luke Wolfenden
2017 McLaughlin RL, Schijven D, Van Rheenen W, Van Eijk KR, O'Brien M, Kahn RS, et al., 'Genetic correlation between amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and schizophrenia', Nature Communications, 8 (2017) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/ncomms14774
Citations Scopus - 89Web of Science - 80
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland
2017 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, Paul DJ, 'Implementation and Evaluation of a Component-Based framework for Internet Applications', INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN INDUSTRY, 5 16-23 (2017) [C1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2016 Abed-Alguni B, Paul D, Chalup S, Henskens FA, 'A Comparison Study of Cooperative Q-learning Algorithms for Independent Learners', International Journal of Artificial Intelligence, 14 71-93 (2016) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 37
Co-authors Stephan Chalup
2016 Johnson EC, Bjelland DW, Howrigan DP, Abdellaoui A, Breen G, Borglum A, et al., 'No Reliable Association between Runs of Homozygosity and Schizophrenia in a Well-Powered Replication Study', PLOS Genetics, 12 e1006343-e1006343 [C1]
DOI 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006343
Citations Scopus - 18Web of Science - 16
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland
2016 Bryant J, Sanson-Fisher R, Fradgley E, Hobden B, Zucca A, Henskens F, et al., 'A consumer register: an acceptable and cost-effective alternative for accessing patient populations', BMC Medical Research Methodology, 16 1-10 (2016) [C1]

Background: Population-based registries are increasingly used to recruit patient samples for research, however, they have several limitations including low consent and participati... [more]

Background: Population-based registries are increasingly used to recruit patient samples for research, however, they have several limitations including low consent and participation rates, and potential selection bias. To improve access to samples for research, the utility of a new model of recruitment termed the 'Consumer Register', that allows for direct patient recruitment from hospitals, was examined. This paper reports: (i) consent rates onto the register; (ii) preferred methods and frequency of contact; and (iii) the feasibility of establishing the register, including: (a) cost per person recruited to the register; (b) the differential cost and consent rates of volunteer versus paid data collectors; and (c) participant completion rates. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in five outpatient clinics in Australia. Patients were approached by volunteers or paid data collectors and asked to complete a touch-screen electronic survey. Consenting individuals were asked to indicate their willingness and preferences for enrolment onto a research register. Descriptive statistics were used to examine patient preferences and linear regression used to model the success of volunteer versus paid data collectors. The opportunity and financial costs of establishing the register were calculated. Results: A total of 1947 patients (80.6 %) consented to complete the survey, of which, 1486 (76.3 %) completed the questionnaire. Of the completers, the majority (69.4 %, or 1032 participants) were willing to be listed on the register and preferred to be contacted by email (50.3 %). Almost 39 % of completers were willing to be contacted three or more times in a 12 month period. The annual opportunity cost of resources consumed by the register was valued at $37,187, giving an opportunity cost per person recruited to the register of $36. After amortising fixed costs, the annual financial outlay was $23,004 or $22 per person recruited to the register. Use of volunteer data collectors contributed to an annual saving of $14,183, however paid data collectors achieved significantly higher consent rates. Successful enrolment onto the register was completed for 42 % of the sample. Conclusions: A Consumer Register is a promising and feasible alternative to population-based registries, with the majority of participants willing to be contacted multiple times via low-resource methods such as email. There is an effectiveness/cost trade off in the use of paid versus volunteer data collectors.

DOI 10.1186/s12874-016-0238-8
Citations Scopus - 4Web of Science - 3
Co-authors Alison Zucca, Bree Hobden, Jamie Bryant, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Christopher Oldmeadow
2016 Paul CL, Boyes AW, O'Brien L, Baker AL, Henskens FA, Roos I, et al., 'Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial of Proactive Web-Based Versus Telephone-Based Information and Support: Can Electronic Platforms Deliver Effective Care for Lung Cancer Patients?', JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS, 5 (2016)
DOI 10.2196/resprot.6248
Citations Scopus - 13Web of Science - 11
Co-authors Chris Paul, Amanda Baker, Daniel Barker, Allison Boyes
2016 Paul C, Rose S, Hensley M, Pretto J, Hardy M, Henskens F, et al., 'Examining uptake of online education on obstructive sleep apnoea in general practitioners: A randomised trial', BMC Research Notes, 9 (2016) [C1]

Background: Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) affects up to 28 % of the adult population in Western countries. The detection and management of OSA by general practitioners (GPs) can ... [more]

Background: Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) affects up to 28 % of the adult population in Western countries. The detection and management of OSA by general practitioners (GPs) can be poor. The study aimed to examine what influence enhanced invitations had on uptake of on-line learning modules for OSA by GPs, and whether recent referrals of patients to sleep specialists influenced uptake. Methods: Practicing GPs in regional Australia were identified and randomised to receive either an enhanced or standard invitation letter to a new on-line education module for OSA. The enhanced letter included indication that the module was eligible for professional accreditation and described the prevalence and burden of sleep disorders. Some included extra emphasis if the GP had recently referred a patient for diagnostic investigation of OSA. Two reminder letters were sent. Results: Of 796 eligible GPs who received the letters, sixteen (2 %) accessed the website and four completed the modules over the four-month study period. GPs who received an enhanced invitation letter were not significantly more likely to access the website compared to GPs who received the standard invitation letter. Recent referral of a patient for diagnostic investigation was also not a significant factor in influencing use of the module. Conclusion: GP interest in on-line education about OSA appears low, and emphasis of relevant recent past patient(s) and the opportunity for professional education points was not successful in increasing engagement. There is a need to identify effective approaches to improving the detection and management of OSA in general practice.

DOI 10.1186/s13104-016-2157-5
Citations Scopus - 6
Co-authors Chris Paul, Mariko Carey, Michael Hensley
2016 Hauberg ME, Roussos P, Grove J, Børglum AD, Mattheisen M, 'Analyzing the Role of MicroRNAs in Schizophrenia in the Context of Common Genetic Risk Variants', JAMA Psychiatry, 73 369-369 (2016) [C1]
DOI 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2015.3018
Citations Web of Science - 53
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Brian Kelly, Murray Cairns
2016 Rose S, Pretto J, Paul C, Emmett B, Hensley M, Henskens F, 'Relationships between nutritional knowledge, obesity, and sleep disorder severity', Journal of Sleep Research, 25 350-355 (2016) [C1]

Obstructive sleep apnea affects 20% of the adult population. Weight control is considered the best non-medical means of managing the condition, therefore improving nutritional kno... [more]

Obstructive sleep apnea affects 20% of the adult population. Weight control is considered the best non-medical means of managing the condition, therefore improving nutritional knowledge in individuals may be an appropriate strategy. This study aimed to describe the relationship between nutritional knowledge and: (i) sleep disorder severity; (ii) body mass index; and (iii) demographic characteristics in persons suspected of obstructive sleep apnea. Nutrition knowledge scores were also compared with the general population. Consecutive newly-referred patients attending the sleep laboratory for diagnostic polysomnography were invited to participate. Those who consented (n = 97) were asked to complete a touchscreen survey. Apnea-hypopnea index to measure sleep disorder severity and anthropometric measurements were obtained from the clinic. A quarter of participants were diagnosed with severe obstructive sleep apnea; and a majority (88%) were classed as being overweight or obese. The overall mean nutrition knowledge score was 58.4 ± 11.6 (out of 93). Nutrition knowledge was not associated with sleep disorder severity, body mass index or gender. The only significant difference detected was in relation to age, with older (=35 years) participants demonstrating greater knowledge in the 'food choices' domain compared with their younger counterparts (18-34 years; P < 0.030). Knowledge scores were similar to the general population. The findings suggest that nutrition knowledge alone is not an important target for weight control interventions for people with obstructive sleep apnea. However, given the complexities of sleep disorders, it may complement other strategies.

DOI 10.1111/jsr.12378
Citations Scopus - 4Web of Science - 2
Co-authors Michael Hensley, Chris Paul
2016 Franke B, Stein JL, Ripke S, Anttila V, Hibar DP, van Hulzen KJE, et al., 'Genetic influences on schizophrenia and subcortical brain volumes: large-scale proof of concept', Nature Neuroscience, 19 420-431 (2016) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/nn.4228
Citations Scopus - 162Web of Science - 144
Co-authors Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Murray Cairns, Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Brian Kelly
2016 Sekar A, Bialas AR, de Rivera H, Davis A, Hammond TR, Kamitaki N, et al., 'Schizophrenia risk from complex variation of complement component 4', Nature, 530 177-183 (2016) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/nature16549
Citations Scopus - 1616Web of Science - 1271
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Brian Kelly, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns
2016 Bigdeli TB, Ripke S, Bacanu S, Lee SH, Wray NR, Gejman PV, et al., 'Genome-wide association study reveals greater polygenic loading for schizophrenia in cases with a family history of illness', American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B: Neuropsychiatric Genetics, 171 276-289 (2016) [C1]
DOI 10.1002/ajmg.b.32402
Citations Web of Science - 22
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2016 Srinivasan S, Bettella F, Mattingsdal M, Wang Y, Witoelar A, Schork AJ, et al., 'Genetic Markers of Human Evolution Are Enriched in Schizophrenia', Biological Psychiatry, 80 284-292 (2016) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2015.10.009
Citations Web of Science - 62
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Brian Kelly, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns
2016 Mehta D, Tropf FC, Gratten J, Bakshi A, Zhu Z, Bacanu S-A, et al., 'Evidence for Genetic Overlap Between Schizophrenia and Age at First Birth in Women.', JAMA psychiatry, 73 497-505 (2016) [C1]
DOI 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2016.0129
Citations Web of Science - 35
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns, Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney
2016 Wang Y, Thompson WK, Schork AJ, Holland D, Chen C-H, Bettella F, et al., 'Leveraging Genomic Annotations and Pleiotropic Enrichment for Improved Replication Rates in Schizophrenia GWAS', PLOS Genetics, 12 e1005803-e1005803 [C1]
DOI 10.1371/journal.pgen.1005803
Citations Web of Science - 28
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Murray Cairns, Brian Kelly
2016 Fernando DAIP, Henskens FA, 'The Drill-Locate-Drill (DLD) algorithm for automated medical diagnostic reasoning: Implementation and evaluation in psychiatry', Studies in Computational Intelligence, 656 1-14 (2016) [C1]

The drill-locate-drill (DLD) algorithm models the expert clinician¿s top-down diagnostic reasoning process, which generates a set of diagnostic hypotheses using a set of screening... [more]

The drill-locate-drill (DLD) algorithm models the expert clinician¿s top-down diagnostic reasoning process, which generates a set of diagnostic hypotheses using a set of screening symptoms, and then tests them by eliciting specific clinical information for each differential diagnosis. The algorithm arrives at final diagnoses by matching the elicited clinical features with what is expected in each differential diagnosis using an efficient technique known as the orthogonal vector projection method. The DLD algorithm is compared with its rival select-test (ST) algorithm and its design/implementation in psychiatry, and evaluation using actual patient data is discussed.

DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-40171-3_1
Citations Scopus - 1Web of Science - 8
2015 Bulik-Sullivan B, Loh PR, Finucane HK, Ripke S, Yang J, Patterson N, et al., 'LD score regression distinguishes confounding from polygenicity in genome-wide association studies', Nature Genetics, 47 291-295 (2015) [C1]

Both polygenicity (many small genetic effects) and confounding biases, such as cryptic relatedness and population stratification, can yield an inflated distribution of test statis... [more]

Both polygenicity (many small genetic effects) and confounding biases, such as cryptic relatedness and population stratification, can yield an inflated distribution of test statistics in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). However, current methods cannot distinguish between inflation from a true polygenic signal and bias. We have developed an approach, LD Score regression, that quantifies the contribution of each by examining the relationship between test statistics and linkage disequilibrium (LD). The LD Score regression intercept can be used to estimate a more powerful and accurate correction factor than genomic control. We find strong evidence that polygenicity accounts for the majority of the inflation in test statistics in many GWAS of large sample size.

DOI 10.1038/ng.3211
Citations Scopus - 2555Web of Science - 1998
Co-authors Murray Cairns, Brian Kelly, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall
2015 Bryant J, Sanson-Fisher R, Stevenson W, Smits R, Henskens F, Wei A, et al., 'Protocol of a multi-centre randomised controlled trial of a web-based information intervention with nurse-delivered telephone support for haematological cancer patients and their support persons', BMC Cancer, 15 (2015) [C3]

Background: High rates of anxiety, depression and unmet needs are evident amongst haematological cancer patients undergoing treatment and their Support Persons. Psychosocial distr... [more]

Background: High rates of anxiety, depression and unmet needs are evident amongst haematological cancer patients undergoing treatment and their Support Persons. Psychosocial distress may be minimised by ensuring that patients are sufficiently involved in decision making, provided with tailored information and adequate preparation for potentially threatening procedures. To date, there are no published studies evaluating interventions designed to reduce psychosocial distress and unmet needs specifically in patients with haematological cancers and their Support Persons. This study will examine whether access to a web-based information tool and nurse-delivered telephone support reduces depression, anxiety and unmet information needs for haematological cancer patients and their Support Persons. Methods/Design: A non-blinded, parallel-group, multi-centre randomised controlled trial will be conducted to compare the effectiveness of a web-based information tool and nurse-delivered telephone support with usual care. Participants will be recruited from the haematology inpatient wards of five hospitals in New South Wales, Australia. Patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia, acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, Burkitt's lymphoma, Lymphoblastic lymphoma (B or T cell), or Diffuse Large B-Cell lymphoma and their Support Persons will be eligible to participate. Patients and their Support Persons will be randomised as dyads. Participants allocated to the intervention will receive access to a tailored web-based tool that provides accurate, up-to-date and personalised information about: cancer and its causes; treatment options including treatment procedures information; complementary and alternative medicine; and available support. Patients and Support Persons will complete self-report measures of anxiety, depression and unmet needs at 2, 4, 8 and 12 weeks post-recruitment. Patient and Support Person outcomes will be assessed independently. Discussion: This study will assess whether providing information and support using web-based and telephone support address the major psychosocial challenges faced by haematological patients and their Support Persons. The approach, if found to be effective, has potential to improve psychosocial outcomes for haematological and other cancer patients, reduce the complexity and burden of meeting patients' psychosocial needs for health care providers with high potential for translation into clinical practice.

DOI 10.1186/s12885-015-1314-x
Citations Scopus - 14Web of Science - 11
Co-authors Chris Paul, Flora Tzelepis, Catherine Deste, Mariko Carey, Jamie Bryant, Rob Sanson-Fisher
2015 Garrison JR, Fernyhough C, McCarthy-Jones S, Haggard M, Carr V, Schall U, et al., 'Paracingulate sulcus morphology is associated with hallucinations in the human brain', Nature Communications, 6 (2015) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/ncomms9956
Citations Scopus - 67Web of Science - 53
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2015 Carey M, Noble N, Mansfield E, Waller A, Henskens F, Sanson-Fisher R, 'The role of ehealth in optimizing preventive care in the primary care setting', Journal of Medical Internet Research, 17 (2015) [C1]

Modifiable health risk behaviors such as smoking, overweight and obesity, risky alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, and poor nutrition contribute to a substantial proportion... [more]

Modifiable health risk behaviors such as smoking, overweight and obesity, risky alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, and poor nutrition contribute to a substantial proportion of the world's morbidity and mortality burden. General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in identifying and managing modifiable health risk behaviors. However, these are often underdetected and undermanaged in the primary care setting. We describe the potential of eHealth to help patients and GPs to overcome some of the barriers to managing health risk behaviors. In particular, we discuss (1) the role of eHealth in facilitating routine collection of patient-reported data on lifestyle risk factors, and (2) the role of eHealth in improving clinical management of identified risk factors through provision of tailored feedback, point-of-care reminders, tailored educational materials, and referral to online self-management programs. Strategies to harness the capacity of the eHealth medium, including the use of dynamic features and tailoring to help end users engage with, understand, and apply information need to be considered and maximized. Finally, the potential challenges in implementing eHealth solutions in the primary care setting are discussed. In conclusion, there is significant potential for innovative eHealth solutions to make a contribution to improving preventive care in the primary care setting. However, attention to issues such as data security and designing eHealth interfaces that maximize engagement from end users will be important to moving this field forward.

DOI 10.2196/jmir.3817
Citations Scopus - 36Web of Science - 28
Co-authors Mariko Carey, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Elise Mansfield, Natasha Noble
2015 Vilhjálmsson BJ, Yang J, Finucane HK, Gusev A, Lindström S, Ripke S, et al., 'Modeling Linkage Disequilibrium Increases Accuracy of Polygenic Risk Scores', American Journal of Human Genetics, 97 576-592 (2015) [C1]

Polygenic risk scores have shown great promise in predicting complex disease risk and will become more accurate as training sample sizes increase. The standard approach for calcul... [more]

Polygenic risk scores have shown great promise in predicting complex disease risk and will become more accurate as training sample sizes increase. The standard approach for calculating risk scores involves linkage disequilibrium (LD)-based marker pruning and applying a p value threshold to association statistics, but this discards information and can reduce predictive accuracy. We introduce LDpred, a method that infers the posterior mean effect size of each marker by using a prior on effect sizes and LD information from an external reference panel. Theory and simulations show that LDpred outperforms the approach of pruning followed by thresholding, particularly at large sample sizes. Accordingly, predicted R2 increased from 20.1% to 25.3% in a large schizophrenia dataset and from 9.8% to 12.0% in a large multiple sclerosis dataset. A similar relative improvement in accuracy was observed for three additional large disease datasets and for non-European schizophrenia samples. The advantage of LDpred over existing methods will grow as sample sizes increase.

DOI 10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.09.001
Citations Scopus - 775Web of Science - 609
Co-authors Brian Kelly, Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott
2015 Abed-alguni BH, Chalup SK, Henskens FA, Paul DJ, 'Erratum to: A multi-agent cooperative reinforcement learning model using a hierarchy of consultants, tutors and workers', Vietnam Journal of Computer Science, 2 227-227 (2015)
DOI 10.1007/s40595-015-0047-8
Co-authors Stephan Chalup
2015 Finucane HK, Bulik-Sullivan B, Gusev A, Trynka G, Reshef Y, Loh P-R, et al., 'Partitioning heritability by functional annotation using genome-wide association summary statistics', Nature Genetics, 47 1228-1235 (2015) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/ng.3404
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2015 Loh P-R, Bhatia G, Gusev A, Finucane HK, Bulik-Sullivan BK, Pollack SJ, et al., 'Contrasting genetic architectures of schizophrenia and other complex diseases using fast variance-components analysis', Nature Genetics, 47 1385-1392 (2015) [C1]
DOI 10.1038/ng.3431
Citations Scopus - 279
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall
2015 Abed-alguni BH, Chalup SK, Henskens FA, Paul DJ, 'A multi-agent cooperative reinforcement learning model using a hierarchy of consultants, tutors and workers', Vietnam Journal of Computer Science, 2 213-226 (2015) [C1]
DOI 10.1007/s40595-015-0045-x
Co-authors Stephan Chalup
2015 Ingason A, Giegling I, Hartmann AM, Genius J, Konte B, Friedl M, et al., 'Expression analysis in a rat psychosis model identifies novel candidate genes validated in a large case control sample of schizophrenia', Translational Psychiatry, 5 e656-e656 [C1]
DOI 10.1038/tp.2015.151
Citations Web of Science - 23
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Murray Cairns, Brian Kelly, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie
2014 Smits R, Bryant J, Sanson-Fisher R, Tzelepis F, Henskens F, Paul C, Stevenson W, 'Tailored and integrated Web-based tools for improving psychosocial outcomes of cancer patients: the DoTTI development framework.', J Med Internet Res, 16 e76 (2014) [C1]
DOI 10.2196/jmir.2849
Citations Scopus - 24Web of Science - 19
Co-authors Jamie Bryant, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Flora Tzelepis, Chris Paul
2014 Paul CL, Levi CR, D'Este CA, Parsons MW, Bladin CF, Lindley RI, et al., 'Thrombolysis ImPlementation in Stroke (TIPS): Evaluating the effectiveness of a strategy to increase the adoption of best evidence practice - protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial in acute stroke care', Implementation Science, 9 (2014) [C3]

Background: Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability internationally. One of the three effective interventions in the acute phase of stroke care is thrombolytic therapy w... [more]

Background: Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability internationally. One of the three effective interventions in the acute phase of stroke care is thrombolytic therapy with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), if given within 4.5 hours of onset to appropriate cases of ischaemic stroke.Objectives: To test the effectiveness of a multi-component multidisciplinary collaborative approach compared to usual care as a strategy for increasing thrombolysis rates for all stroke patients at intervention hospitals, while maintaining accepted benchmarks for low rates of intracranial haemorrhage and high rates of functional outcomes for both groups at three months.Methods and design: A cluster randomised controlled trial of 20 hospitals across 3 Australian states with 2 groups: multi- component multidisciplinary collaborative intervention as the experimental group and usual care as the control group. The intervention is based on behavioural theory and analysis of the steps, roles and barriers relating to rapid assessment for thrombolysis eligibility; it involves a comprehensive range of strategies addressing individual-level and system-level change at each site. The primary outcome is the difference in tPA rates between the two groups post-intervention. The secondary outcome is the proportion of tPA treated patients in both groups with good functional outcomes (modified Rankin Score (mRS <2) and the proportion with intracranial haemorrhage (mRS =2), compared to international benchmarks.Discussion: TIPS will trial a comprehensive, multi-component and multidisciplinary collaborative approach to improving thrombolysis rates at multiple sites. The trial has the potential to identify methods for optimal care which can be implemented for stroke patients during the acute phase. Study findings will include barriers and solutions to effective thrombolysis implementation and trial outcomes will be published whether significant or not.Trial registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: ACTRN12613000939796. © 2014 Paul et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

DOI 10.1186/1748-5908-9-38
Citations Scopus - 23Web of Science - 20
Co-authors Catherine Deste, Chris Paul, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Mark Parsons, Alice Grady, Christopher Levi, John Attia
2014 Gusev A, Lee SH, Trynka G, Finucane H, Vilhjálmsson BJ, Xu H, et al., 'Partitioning Heritability of Regulatory and Cell-Type-Specific Variants across 11 Common Diseases', The American Journal of Human Genetics, 95 535-552 (2014) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.10.004
Citations Scopus - 404Web of Science - 365
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Brian Kelly, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland
2014 Nicodemus KK, Hargreaves A, Morris D, Anney R, Gill M, Corvin A, Donohoe G, 'Variability in Working Memory Performance Explained by Epistasis vs Polygenic Scores in the
DOI 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.528
Citations Scopus - 27Web of Science - 23
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2014 Ripke S, Neale BM, Corvin A, Walters JTR, Farh KH, Holmans PA, et al., 'Biological insights from 108 schizophrenia-associated genetic loci', Nature, 511 421-427 (2014) [C1]

Schizophrenia is a highly heritable disorder. Genetic risk is conferred by a large number of alleles, including common alleles of small effect that might be detected by genome-wid... [more]

Schizophrenia is a highly heritable disorder. Genetic risk is conferred by a large number of alleles, including common alleles of small effect that might be detected by genome-wide association studies. Here we report a multi-stage schizophrenia genome-wide association study of up to 36,989 cases and 113,075 controls. We identify 128 independent associations spanning 108 conservatively defined loci that meet genome-wide significance, 83 of which have not been previously reported. Associations were enriched among genes expressed in brain, providing biological plausibility for the findings. Many findings have the potential to provide entirely new insights into aetiology, but associations at DRD2 and several genes involved in glutamatergic neurotransmission highlight molecules of known and potential therapeutic relevance to schizophrenia, and are consistent with leading pathophysiological hypotheses. Independent of genes expressed in brain, associations were enriched among genes expressed in tissues that have important roles in immunity, providing support for the speculated link between the immune system and schizophrenia. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

DOI 10.1038/nature13595
Citations Scopus - 5607Web of Science - 4899
Co-authors Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall
2014 Fradgley EA, Paul CL, Bryant J, Roos IA, Henskens FA, Paul DJ, 'Consumer participation in quality improvements for chronic disease care: development and evaluation of an interactive patient-centered survey to identify preferred service initiatives.', Journal of medical Internet research, 16 e292 (2014) [C1]
DOI 10.2196/jmir.3545
Citations Scopus - 11
Co-authors Chris Paul, Jamie Bryant
2014 Alharbi A, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'Personalised Learning Object System Based on Self-Regulated Learning Theories', International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy (iJEP), 4 24-35 (2014) [C1]
DOI 10.3991/ijep.v4i3.3348
Citations Web of Science - 6
2013 Rose S, Emmett B, Paul C, Hensley M, Henskens FA, Pretto J, 'Relationships between nutrition knowledge, obesity and severity of sleep-disordered breathing', Sleep and Biological Rhythm, 11 1-78 (2013)
Co-authors Michael Hensley, Chris Paul
2013 Terwisscha van Scheltinga AF, Bakker SC, van Haren NEM, Derks EM, Buizer-Voskamp JE, Boos HBM, et al., 'Genetic Schizophrenia Risk Variants Jointly Modulate Total Brain and White Matter Volume', Biological Psychiatry, 73 525-531 (2013) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsych.2012.08.017
Citations Scopus - 92Web of Science - 86
Co-authors Pat Michie, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott
2013 Van Scheltinga AFT, Bakker SC, Van Haren NEM, Derks EM, Buizer-Voskamp JE, Cahn W, et al., 'Schizophrenia genetic variants are not associated with intelligence', Psychological Medicine, 43 2563-2570 (2013) [C1]

Background Schizophrenia is associated with lower pre-morbid intelligence (IQ) in addition to (pre-morbid) cognitive decline. Both schizophrenia and IQ are highly heritable traits... [more]

Background Schizophrenia is associated with lower pre-morbid intelligence (IQ) in addition to (pre-morbid) cognitive decline. Both schizophrenia and IQ are highly heritable traits. Therefore, we hypothesized that genetic variants associated with schizophrenia, including copy number variants (CNVs) and a polygenic schizophrenia (risk) score (PSS), may influence intelligence. Method IQ was estimated with the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS). CNVs were determined from single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data using the QuantiSNP and PennCNV algorithms. For the PSS, odds ratios for genome-wide SNP data were calculated in a sample collected by the Psychiatric Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) Consortium (8690 schizophrenia patients and 11 831 controls). These were used to calculate individual PSSs in our independent sample of 350 schizophrenia patients and 322 healthy controls. Results Although significantly more genes were disrupted by deletions in schizophrenia patients compared to controls (p = 0.009), there was no effect of CNV measures on IQ. The PSS was associated with disease status (R 2 = 0.055, p = 2.1 × 10 -7) and with IQ in the entire sample (R 2 = 0.018, p = 0.0008) but the effect on IQ disappeared after correction for disease status. Conclusions Our data suggest that rare and common schizophrenia-associated variants do not explain the variation in IQ in healthy subjects or in schizophrenia patients. Thus, reductions in IQ in schizophrenia patients may be secondary to other processes related to schizophrenia risk. © Cambridge University Press 2013.

DOI 10.1017/S0033291713000196
Citations Scopus - 34Web of Science - 28
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2013 Paul CL, Carey M, Yoong SL, D'Este C, Makeham M, Henskens F, 'Access to chronic disease care in general practice: The acceptability of implementing systematic waiting-room screening using computer-based patient-reported risk status', British Journal of General Practice, 63 (2013) [C1]
DOI 10.3399/bjgp13X671605
Citations Scopus - 20Web of Science - 21
Co-authors Mariko Carey, Catherine Deste, Chris Paul, Serene Yoong
2013 Fernando I, Cohen M, Henskens F, 'A systematic approach to clinical reasoning in psychiatry', Australasian Psychiatry, 21 224-230 (2013) [C1]
DOI 10.1177/1039856213486209
Citations Scopus - 21Web of Science - 20
2013 Rose S, Emmett B, Pretto J, Hensley M, Henskens FA, Tindall K, Paul C, 'Accuracy of questionnaire-based measures for predicting sleep disoriented breathing', Sleep and Biological Rhythms, 11 1-78 (2013)
DOI 10.1111/sbr.12028
Co-authors Michael Hensley, Chris Paul
2013 Schork AJ, Thompson WK, Pham P, Torkamani A, Roddey JC, Sullivan PF, et al., 'All SNPs Are Not Created Equal: Genome-Wide Association Studies Reveal a Consistent Pattern of Enrichment among Functionally Annotated SNPs', PLOS GENETICS, 9 (2013) [C1]
DOI 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003449
Citations Scopus - 215Web of Science - 183
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie
2013 Fernando I, Henskens, 'ST Algorithm for Medical Diagnostic Reasoning', Polibits, 23-29 (2013) [C1]
2013 Fernando I, 'Modelling Diagnostic Reasoning Based on Mental State Examination', International Journal of Modeling and Optimization, 471-474 [C1]
DOI 10.7763/ijmo.2013.v3.323
2013 Fernando I, Henskens, 'Drill-Locate-Drill Algorithm for Diagnostic Reasoning in Psychiatry', International Journal of Machine Learning and Computing, 3 449-452 (2013) [C1]
DOI 10.7763/IJMLC.2013.V3.358
2012 Fernando I, Cohen M, Henskens FA, 'Pattern-based formulation: A methodology for psychiatric case formulation', Australasian Psychiatry, 20 121-126 (2012) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 20Web of Science - 19
2012 Alharbi AHM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Student-centered learning objects to support the self-regulated learning of computer science', Creative Education, 3 773-783 (2012) [C1]
DOI 10.4236/ce.2012.326116
2012 Alharbi AHM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'A domain-based learning object search engine to support self-regulated learning', International Journal of Computer and Information Technology, 1 83-93 (2012) [C1]
2011 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Web 2.0 data: Decoupling ownership from provision', International Journal on Advances in Internet Technology, 4 47-59 (2011) [C1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2011 Gwas Consortium, Henskens FA, Loughland CM, Michie PT, Schall UA, Scott R, 'Genome-wide association study identifies five new schizophrenia loci', Nature Genetics, 43 969-U77 (2011) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 1591Web of Science - 1424
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall
2011 Paul CL, Carey ML, Hall AE, Lynagh MC, Sanson-Fisher RW, Henskens FA, 'Improving access to information and support for patients with less common cancers: hematologic cancer patients' views about web-based approaches', Journal of Medical Internet Research, 13 (2011) [C1]
DOI 10.2196/jmir.1894
Citations Scopus - 22Web of Science - 18
Co-authors Mariko Carey, Marita Lynagh, Alix Hall, Rob Sanson-Fisher, Chris Paul
2010 Alom BMM, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'Query Processing using Dynamic Relational Structure for Semistructured Data', INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND NETWORK SECURITY, 10 104-113 (2010)
2010 Alom BMM, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'Indexing and Querying Semistructured Data Views of Relational Database', INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND NETWORK SECURITY, 10 118-133 (2010)
2010 Loughland CM, Draganic D, McCabe KL, Richards JM, Nasir MA, Allen J, et al., 'Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank: A database of comprehensive clinical, endophenotypic and genetic data for aetiological studies of schizophrenia', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 44 1029-1035 (2010) [C1]
DOI 10.3109/00048674.2010.501758
Citations Web of Science - 85
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Paul Tooney, Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2009 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Query processing and optimization in distributed database systems', International Journal of Computer Science and Network Security, 9 143-152 (2009) [C1]
Citations Web of Science - 3
2009 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Performance evaluation on storing and querying database with compression views of distributed environment', International Journal of Computational Science, 3 456-471 (2009) [C1]
2009 Alom BM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Deadlock Detection and Optimization Views of Distributed Database', Journal of Computer Theory and Engineering, 171-179 (2009)
2008 Huebner E, Henskens FA, 'Guest Editors', Operating Systems Review, 42 (2008) [C2]
2008 Huebner E, Henskens FA, 'The role of operating systems in computer forensics', Operating Systems Review, 42 1-3 (2008) [C3]
Citations Scopus - 6
2007 Huebner E, Bem D, Henskens FA, Wallis MR, 'Persistent systems techniques in forensic acquisition of memory', Digital Investigation, 4 129-137 (2007) [C1]
DOI 10.1016/j.diin.2008.02.001
Citations Scopus - 13Web of Science - 9
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2007 Henskens FA, Ashton MG, 'Graph-based optimistic transaction management', Journal of Object Technology, 6 131-148 (2007) [C1]
DOI 10.5381/jot.2007.6.6.a4
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 1
2006 Keedy JL, Espenlaub K, Heinlein C, Menger G, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Support for object oriented transactions in Timor', Journal of Object Technology, 5 103-124 (2006) [C1]
DOI 10.5381/jot.2006.5.2.a1
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 3
2005 Hunter M, Smith RLL, Hyslop W, Rosso OA, Gerlach R, Rostas JAP, et al., 'The Australian EEG database', CLINICAL EEG AND NEUROSCIENCE, 36 76-81 (2005) [C2]
DOI 10.1177/155005940503600206
Citations Scopus - 45Web of Science - 34
Co-authors Mick Hunter, John Rostas
2004 Robertson GA, Thiruvenkataswamy V, Shilling H, Price EP, Huygens F, Henskens FA, Giffard PM, 'Identification and interrogation of highly informative single nucleotide polymorphism sets defined by bacterial multilocus sequence typing databases', Journal of Medical Microbiology, 35-45 (2004) [C1]
DOI 10.1099/jmm.0.05365-0
Citations Scopus - 59Web of Science - 59
2003 Byrne TJ, Henskens FA, Johnston PJ, Katsikitis M, 'Facexpress: an integrated software suite for facial emotion stimulus manipulation and facial measurement', Methods of Psychological Research Online, 8 97-111 (2003) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 2
2003 Keedy L, Menger G, Heinlein C, Henskens FA, 'Qualifying Types Illustrated by Synchronisation Examples', Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2591 330-344 (2003) [C1]
2002 Robertson G, Schilling H, Thiruvenkataswamy V, Henskens F, Huygens F, Giffard P, 'Computer-aided Identification of Highly Informative Bacterial SNPS', Microbiology Australia, 23 23-26 (2002) [C1]
2001 Johnston PJ, Henskens F, McGowan W, 'NEU-MODEL: A multi-level object-oriented dynamic emulation laboratory', Neurocomputing, 38-40 1671-1677 (2001) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 1Web of Science - 1
1995 Jalili R, Henskens FA, Koch DM, Rosenberg J, 'Operating system support for object dependencies in persistent object stores', Workshop on Object-Oriented Real-Time Dependable Systems (WORDS), Proceedings, 18-29 (1995)

Persistent object stores provide uniform management of short-term and long-term objects. Such stores ensure the integrity of the data even after occurrence of a failure, by guaran... [more]

Persistent object stores provide uniform management of short-term and long-term objects. Such stores ensure the integrity of the data even after occurrence of a failure, by guaranteeing the existence of some previous self-consistent stable state at each point in time. Maintaining a consistent state of a persistent store necessitates recording of inter-object dependencies and checkpointing of each object together with all its dependent objects. Directed graphs may be used to describe such dependencies. In this paper we describe eager and lazy construction of dependency graphs. We then address operating system and hardware support for management of dependencies.

Citations Scopus - 1
1994 Dearle A, Di Bona R, Farrow JM, Henskens FA, Lindstrom A, Rosenbery J, 'Grasshopper: An Orthogonally Persistent Operating System', Computing Systems Journal, 7 289-312 (1994) [C1]
Citations Scopus - 42Web of Science - 26
1993 Henskens FA, Rosenberg J, 'Distributed Persistent Stores', Journal of Microprocessors and Microsystems, 17 147-159 (1993) [C1]
1993 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Distributed Shared Memories', Gozaresh-E-Computer, 15 16-33 (1993) [C1]
1993 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Management of Persistent Data', Gozaresh-E-Computer, 15 24-32 (1993) [C1]
Show 122 more journal articles

Conference (129 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2023 Fakes K, Waller A, Carey M, Czerenkowski J, Dizon J, Henskens F, Sanson-Fisher R, 'Effectiveness of a discharge intervention to improve stroke survivor outcomes and website engagement', PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING (2023)
DOI 10.1016/j.pec.2022.10.162
Co-authors Mariko Carey
2021 Paul C, Cox M, Boyes A, Rose S, Baker A, Clinton-McHarg T, et al., 'Online and PhoneAssistance for Lung Cancer Patients (OPAL): Uptake and outcomes for telephone versus online support in a randomised controlled trial', INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE (2021)
Co-authors Chris Paul, Allison Boyes, Amanda Baker
2021 Georgiadis F, Lariviere S, Carr V, Catts S, Green M, Henskens F, et al., 'Brain Network Architecture Intricately Linked to Morphological Abnormalities in Major Psychiatric Disorders', BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY (2021)
Co-authors Pat Michie
2020 Din FU, Paul D, Ryan J, Henskens F, Wallis M, 'Revitalising and validating the novel approach of xAOSF framework under industry 4.0 in comparison with linear SC', Agents and Multi-Agent Systems: Technologies and Applications 2020. 14th KES International Conference, KES-AMSTA 2020, Online (2020) [E1]
DOI 10.1007/978-981-15-5764-4_1
Citations Scopus - 3
Co-authors Mark Wallis, Joe Ryan
2019 HK J, Jetley R, Henskens F, Paul D, Wallis M, S D S, 'Analysis of Industrial Control System Software to Detect Semantic Clones', 2019 IEEE International Conference on Industrial Technology (ICIT), Melbourne, Australia (2019)
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 3
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2018 Ud Din F, Henskens F, Paul D, Wallis MR, 'Formalisation of Problem and Domain Definition for Agent Oriented Smart Factory (AOSF)', 2018 IEEE Region Ten Symposium (Tensymp), Sydney, Australia (2018) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/TENCONSpring.2018.8691967
Citations Scopus - 6Web of Science - 2
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2018 Jnanamurthy HK, Henskens F, Paul D, Wallis MR, 'Clone Detection in Model-Based Development Using Formal Methods to Enhance Performance in Software Development', 2018 3rd International Conference for Convergence in Technology (I2CT), Pune, India (2018) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/I2CT.2018.8529446
Citations Scopus - 3
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2017 Paul C, Cox M, Rose S, Boyes A, Baker A, Henskens F, et al., 'Quantifying Intervention Engagement in a Trial of Online Versus Telephone-Based Information and Support for New Lung Cancer Patients', ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY (2017)
Co-authors Chris Paul, Allison Boyes, Amanda Baker
2017 Paul C, Cox M, Small H, Boyes A, Rose S, Baker A, et al., 'Techniques for improving communication and emotional content in text-only online therapeutic communications: A systematic review', PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY (2017)
Citations Scopus - 5
Co-authors Allison Boyes, Chris Paul, Amanda Baker
2017 Paul C, Cox M, Rose S, Boyes A, Baker A, Henskens F, et al., 'Quantifying intervention engagement in a trial of online versus telephone information and support for new lung cancer patients', PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY (2017)
Co-authors Chris Paul, Allison Boyes, Amanda Baker
2016 Weickert CS, Fullerton JM, Hu S, Kyaw M, Schofield PR, Carr VJ, et al., 'SCHIZOPHRENIA AND COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTION ASSOCIATED WITH THE ESTROGEN RECEPTOR 1 GENOTYPE', AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY (2016)
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2016 Fernando DAIP, Henskens FA, 'The Select and Test Algorithm for Inference in Medical Diagnostic Reasoning: Implementation and Evaluation in Clinical Psychiatry', 2016 IEEE/ACIS 15TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SCIENCE (ICIS), Okayama, JAPAN (2016) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 2
2016 Cox M, Paul C, Rose S, Boyes A, Baker A, Henskens F, et al., 'QUANTIFYING INTERVENTION ENGAGEMENT IN A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF ONLINE VERSUS TELEPHONE-BASED INFORMATION AND SUPPORT FOR LUNG CANCER PATIENTS', ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY (2016)
Co-authors Amanda Baker, Chris Paul, Allison Boyes
2016 Cox M, Paul C, Rose S, Boyes A, Baker A, Henskens F, et al., 'RESPONSES TO THE HEALTH EDUCATION IMPACT QUESTIONNAIRE (HEIQ) TO DESCRIBE LEVELS OF EMPOWERMENT IN A COHORT OF RECENTLY DIAGNOSED LUNG CANCER PATIENTS', ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY (2016)
Co-authors Amanda Baker, Chris Paul, Allison Boyes
2016 Lynam J, Hall A, Ayoola A, Sridharan S, Henskens F, Smith A, et al., 'DECISION-MAKING PREFERENCES AND SATISFACTION OF STAGE ONE TESTICULAR CANCER PATIENTS', ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY (2016)
Co-authors Bree Hobden, Alix Hall, Nick Zdenkowski
2016 Jnanamurthy HK, Henskens F, Paul D, 'Verification of Interactive Automated Air Traffic Control System in a Model Driven Approach', PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2016 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONTEMPORARY COMPUTING AND INFORMATICS (IC3I), Amity Univ, Noida, INDIA (2016) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 1
2016 Hall A, Lynam J, Ayoola A, Sridharan S, Henskens F, Smith A, et al., 'ASSESSING THE INFORMATION NEEDS OF STAGE ONE TESTICULAR CANCER PATIENTS AND THEIR CARERS', ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, Newcastle, Australia (2016)
Co-authors Alix Hall, Nick Zdenkowski, Bree Hobden
2016 Fernando DAIP, Henskens FA, 'Select and Test (ST) Algorithm for Medical Diagnostic Reasoning', SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, NETWORKING AND PARALLEL/DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING, Shanghai, PEOPLES R CHINA (2016) [E1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-33810-1_6
Citations Scopus - 3
2016 Paul CL, Ryan A, Attia JR, D'Este CA, Kerr E, Jayakody A, et al., 'THROMBOLYSIS IMPLEMENTATION IN STROKE (TIPS): VARIATION IN 'READINESS TO CHANGE' AND ENGAGEMENT WITH TRANSLATION STRATEGIES', INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE (2016)
Co-authors Rob Sanson-Fisher, Alice Grady, John Attia, Catherine Deste, Chris Paul, Christopher Levi
2016 Paul CL, Attia JR, D'Este CA, Ryan A, Kerr E, Henskens F, Levi CR, 'THROMBOLYSIS IMPLEMENTATION IN STROKE (TIPS): OUTCOMES OF A CLUSTER RANDOMISED TRIAL OF MULTIDISCIPLINARY COLLABORATIVE QUALITY IMPROVEMENT', INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE (2016)
Co-authors John Attia, Catherine Deste, Chris Paul, Christopher Levi
2016 Fernando DAIP, Henskens FA, 'The select and test (ST) algorithm and Drill-Locate-Drill (DLD) algorithm for medical diagnostic reasoning', Artificial Intelligence: Methodology, Systems, and Applications, Varna, Bulgaria (2016) [E1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-44748-3_36
2015 Fernando DAI, Henskens FA, 'A modified case-based reasoning approach for triaging psychiatric patients using a similarity measure derived from orthogonal vector projection', Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (2015) [E1]

A modified case-based reasoning method is introduced aimed to fulfill the need for a triage tool that differentiates likely psychiatric diagnoses and associated risk level. Clinic... [more]

A modified case-based reasoning method is introduced aimed to fulfill the need for a triage tool that differentiates likely psychiatric diagnoses and associated risk level. Clinical cases are represented as a set of clinical features rated on a numerical scale according to level of severity. One standard case is used for each diagnostic category, represented as a vector denoting the expected severity of each clinical feature. A new case represented as another vector denoting the severity of observed clinical features in a patient is assessed against the standard cases. Measurement based on orthogonal vector projection was used as a clinically intuitive measurement of similarity. Using thirty different test cases representing six different diagnostic categories, this measure and alternative similarity measures consisting of cosine similarity and Euclidean distance were evaluated. Results indicated that orthogonal vector projection was superior to the other two methods in differentiating diagnoses and predicting severity.

DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-14803-8_28
Citations Scopus - 10Web of Science - 8
2015 Paul CL, Levi C, Ryan A, Kerr E, Henskens F, Attia J, et al., 'Variation in site 'readiness' and engagement in an implementation trial', 4th Annual NHMRC Symposium on Research Translation jointly with CIPHER, Sydney, NSW (2015) [E3]
Co-authors Rob Sanson-Fisher, John Attia, Catherine Deste, Chris Paul, Christopher Levi
2015 Fernando DAI, Henskens FA, 'A case-based reasoning approach to mental state examination using a similarity measure based on orthogonal vector projection', Proceedings of Special Session 2014 13th Mexican International Conference on Artificial Intelligence: Advances in Artificial Intelligence, MICAI 2014 (2015) [E1]

Mental state examination (MSE) involves assessing the overall severity of illness and also differentiating likely diagnoses. When it is performed on patients serially during the p... [more]

Mental state examination (MSE) involves assessing the overall severity of illness and also differentiating likely diagnoses. When it is performed on patients serially during the period of their illness, the consecutive estimates can serve as an important way to track their recovery. However, the traditional approach to mental state examination that uses clinician's subjective judgement and results in subjective estimates can be unreliable and prone to inconsistencies. Using the approach introduced in this paper, a case is represented as a vector of thirty five different clinical features, which are rated using a numerical scale according to the severity of each clinical feature. The vector length is used as a measure of the overall severity of the illness. The case base consists of one standard case for each of 6 diagnostic categories. Each standard case represents a typical case for its diagnostic category, with each clinical feature rated according to the maximum level of severity that can be expected for that category. Evaluation of a given clinical case, with clinical features as rated by a clinician with regard to the likely diagnoses involves measuring the similarity of the resulting case vector with the standard vectors in the case base. Whilst cosine similarity and Euclidean distance are alternative measures of similarity, a more clinically intuitive and accurate measure based on orthogonal vector projection is proposed. The orthogonal vector projection approach to case based assessment was evaluated using thirty different test cases representing six different common diagnostic categories. For each of the test cases similarity measures obtained using orthogonal vector projection were compared with measures obtained using cosine similarity and Euclidean distance. The results indicated that the orthogonal vector projection approach was able to differentiate both the diagnosis and severity of illness more accurately than the other two similarity measures. The proposed approach has the potential to be used as a standardised clinical tool for both establishing the diagnosis and severity of illness, and also measuring the recovery from illness. In particular, the estimates of recovery obtained from this approach can serve as an important index in healthcare economics.

DOI 10.1109/MICAI.2014.43
Citations Scopus - 2
2014 Henskens FA, Paul DJ, Wallis M, Bryant J, Carey M, Fradgley E, et al., 'Web-based support for population-based medical research: Presenting the QuON survey system', HEALTHINF 2014 - 7th International Conference on Health Informatics, Proceedings; Part of 7th International Joint Conference on Biomedical Engineering Systems and Technologies, BIOSTEC 2014 (2014) [E1]

This paper discusses the needs of medical researchers working in the area of patient-centred medicine, in particular their use of survey data in measuring patient opinions, needs,... [more]

This paper discusses the needs of medical researchers working in the area of patient-centred medicine, in particular their use of survey data in measuring patient opinions, needs, perceived quality of care received, and priorities of health service interventions. Until quite recently, collection of survey data has been either paper-based, or achieved using computer software that largely duplicated paper-based processes with limited additional functionality. The authors investigate the use of web-based technology to support collection of such data from patients, including experiences and observations on enhanced/additional functionality made possible by its adoption. A novel software design termed QuON is presented, together with examples of its capabilities and uses in current research projects. Copyright © 2014 SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications. All rights reserved.

DOI 10.5220/0004738301960204
Citations Scopus - 3
Co-authors Rob Sanson-Fisher, Alison Zucca, Jamie Bryant, Chris Paul, Mariko Carey, Mark Wallis
2014 Pretto J, Rose S, Emmett B, Hensley M, Henskens F, Paul C, 'Relationships between nutritional knowledge, obesity and sleep disorder severity', EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL (2014)
Co-authors Michael Hensley
2014 Henskens FA, Paul DJ, Wallis M, Bryant J, Carey M, Fradgley E, et al., 'How Do Health Researchers Benefit From Web-Based Survey Systems?', Proceedings of e-Health 2014, Lisbon, Portugal (2014) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 1Web of Science - 1
Co-authors Rob Sanson-Fisher, Jamie Bryant, Alison Zucca, Mariko Carey, Mark Wallis, Chris Paul
2014 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Bryant J, Smits R, Sanson-Fisher R, Stevenson W, 'The Haematology Treatment Aid - Providing Personalized Information to Patients and Carers', Proceedings of e-Health, Lisbon, Portugal (2014) [E1]
Co-authors Jamie Bryant, Rob Sanson-Fisher
2014 Kerr E, Sanson-Fisher RW, Paul CL, DEste C, Parsons M, Bladin C, et al., 'Thrombolysis ImPlementation in Stroke (TIPS): Evaluating the effectiveness of a strategy to increase the adoption of best evidence practice: An overview of data collected during the baseline period', INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE (2014) [E3]
Co-authors Chris Paul, Catherine Deste, John Attia, Mark Parsons, Christopher Levi, Rob Sanson-Fisher
2013 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Bridge J, 'Improving the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank', Proceedings eResearch 2013, Brisbane (2013)
2013 Fernando I, Henskens F, 'Treatment Evaluation System (TES): A decision support system for evaluating treatment options', Proceedings of the IADIS International Conference e-Health 2013, EH 2013, Part of the IADIS Multi Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems 2013, MCCSIS 2013, Prague, Czech Republic (2013)
Citations Scopus - 1
2013 Bryant J, Sanson-Fisher R, Stevenson W, Henskens F, Smits R, 'Build it, but will They Come? Development and patient use of an Online Information Tool Designed to Reduce Psychosocial Distress', PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY (2013) [E3]
Citations Web of Science - 1
Co-authors Rob Sanson-Fisher, Jamie Bryant
2013 Alharbi A, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'A pedagogical-based learning object system to support self-regulated learning', Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Computer Supported Education, Aachen, DE (2013) [E1]
DOI 10.5220/0004383801060115
2013 Paul D, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'Dynamic transactional workflows in service-oriented environments', WEBIST 2013 - Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies, Aachen, DE (2013) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 1
2013 Paul D, Wallis M, Henskens F, Nolan K, 'QuON A generic platform for the collation and sharing of web survey data', WEBIST 2013 - Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies, Aachen, DE (2013) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 13
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2012 Fernando I, Henskens FA, Cohen M, 'A Collaborative and Layered Approach (CLAP) for medical expert system development: A software process model', Proceedings 2012 IEEE/ACIS 11th International Conference on Computer and Information Science: ICIS 2012, Shanghai, China (2012) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 2
2012 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'The super-browser: A new paradigm for web applications', INTERNET 2012: The Fourth International Conference on Evolving Internet, Venice, Italy (2012) [E1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2012 Fernando I, Henskens F, 'A Web-based platform for collaborative development of a knowledgebase for psychiatric case formulation and treatment decision support', Proceedings of the IADIS International Conference e-Health 2012, EH 2012, Part of the IADIS Multi Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems 2012, MCCSIS 2012, Lisbon, Portugal (2012) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 2
2012 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Loughland CM, McCabe KL, Bridge JE, Duffy L, et al., 'Issues preventing the migration of the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank to the cloud', Proceedings of the IADIS International Conference On Internet Technologies & Society, Perth, Australia (2012) [E1]
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall
2012 Fernando I, Henskens FA, Cohen M, 'An expert system model in psychiatry for case formulation and treatment decision support', HEALTHINF 2012 - Proceedings of the International Conference on Health Informatics, Vilamoura, Algarve, Portugal (2012) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 4
2012 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Loughland CM, Bridge JE, McCabe KL, Carr VJ, et al., 'IT development and management of a live e-research system: Experiences with the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank', HEALTHINF 2012 - Proceedings of the International Conference on Health Informatics, Vilamoura, Algarve (2012) [E1]
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie
2012 Loughland CM, McCabe KL, Bridge JE, Henskens FA, Catts S, Jablensky A, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Biobank (ASRB): An audit of the first five years of recruitment resource access', Schizophrenia Research, Florence, Italy (2012) [E3]
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2012 Henskens FA, Paul DJ, Loughland CM, Bridge JE, McCabe KL, Catts S, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Biobank (ASRB): IT development and management of a live e-research system', Schizophrenia Research, Florence, Italy (2012) [E3]
Co-authors Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Pat Michie
2011 Fernando I, Henskens FA, Cohen M, 'A domain specific expert system model for diagnostic consultation in psychiatry', Proceedings. 2011 12th ACIS International Conference on Software Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Networking and Parallel/Distributed Computing, Sydney, NSW (2011) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/SNPD.2011.38
Citations Scopus - 9
2011 Alharbi AHM, Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'An investigation into the learning styles and self-regulated learning strategies for computer science students', Changing Demands, Changing Directions. Proceedings ascilite Hobart 2011, Hobart (2011) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 23
2011 Alharbi AHM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Learning object evaluation metrics based on learning styles theory', Changing Demands, Changing Directions. Proceedings ascilite Hobart 2011, Hobart (2011) [E3]
Citations Scopus - 2
2011 Fernando I, Henskens F, Cohen M, 'A domain specific conceptual model for a medical expert system in psychiatry, and a development framework', Proceedings of the IADIS International Conference e-Health 2011, Part of the IADIS Multi Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems 2011, MCCSIS 2011, Rome, Italy (2011) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 5
2011 Alharbi AHM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Pedagogical framework to improve the quality of learning objects in collaborative e-learning systems', Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Computer Supported Education, Volume 2, Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands (2011) [E1]
DOI 10.5220/0003475803530358
Citations Scopus - 2
2011 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Simulating web services transactions', 7th International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies, WEBIST 2011, Noordwijkerhout, Netherlands (2011) [E1]
DOI 10.5220/0003472206150623
Citations Scopus - 2
2011 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Classification and modelling of web technologies', 7th International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies: WEBIST 2011, Noordwijkerhout (2011) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 1
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2011 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Overcast skies: What cloud computing should be?', CLOSER 2011: Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science, Noordwijkerhout (2011) [E1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2011 Alharbi AHM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Computer science learning objects: A case study from online learning object repositories', Proceeding of the International Conference on e-Education, Entertainment and e-Management: ICEEE 2011, Jakarta (2011) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/ICeEEM.2011.6137817
Citations Scopus - 7
2011 Loughland CM, McCabe KL, Catts S, Jablensky A, Henskens FA, Michie PT, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB): The first 550 schizophrenia sample profile', Schizophrenia Bulletin, Schizophrenia Bulletin (2011) [E3]
Co-authors Pat Michie, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott
2010 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Optimization of detected deadlock views of distributed database', Proceedings of the International Conference on Data Storage and Data Engineering (DSDE 2010), Bangalore, India (2010) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/DSDE.2010.41
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 1
2010 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'DRXQP: A dynamic relational XML query processor', Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Information Technology ITNG 2010, Las Vegas, NV (2010) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/ITNG.2010.103
Citations Scopus - 1
2010 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Expanding the cloud: A component-based architecture to application deployment on the Internet', CCGrid 2010 - 10th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Cluster, Cloud, and Grid Computing, Melbourne (2010) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/ccgrid.2010.14
Citations Scopus - 9
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2010 Alharbi A, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'Integrated standard environment for the teaching and learning of operating systems algorithms using visualizations', Proceedings - 5th International Multi-Conference on Computing in the Global Information Technology, ICCGI 2010, Valencia, Spain (2010) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/ICCGI.2010.12
Citations Scopus - 1
2010 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'A distributed content storage model for web applications', Proceedings - The Second International Conference on Evolving Internet INTERNET 2010. The First International Conference on Access Networks, Services and Technologies ACCESS 2010, Valencia, Spain (2010) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/INTERNET.2010.26
Citations Scopus - 3
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2010 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Component-based runtime environment for Internet applications', Proceedings of the IADIS International Conference Internet Technologies & Society 2010, Perth, W.A. (2010) [E1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2010 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'A publish/subscribe model for personal data on the Internet', WEBIST 2010: 6th International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technology, Valencia, Spain (2010) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 4
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2010 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Per-request contracts for web services transactions', WEBIST 2010: 6th International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technology, Valencia, Spain (2010) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 3
2010 Carr V, Loughland C, McCabe K, Nasir A, Catts S, Jablensky A, et al., 'THE AUSTRALIAN SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH BANK (ASRB): DEMOGRAPHIC, CLINICAL AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILE OF PARTICIPANTS WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA', AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY (2010) [E3]
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland, Paul Tooney, Ulrich Schall
2010 Carr V, Loughland CM, McCabe KL, Nasir A, Stan C, Jablensky A, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB): Demographic, clinical and neuropsychological profiles for the first 500 participants with schizophrenia', Schizophrenia Research, Florence, Italy (2010) [E3]
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2010 Henskens FA, Carr VJ, Catts S, Jablensky A, Michie PT, Loughland CM, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB): An example of eresearch', Schizophrenia Research, Florence, Italy (2010) [E3]
Co-authors Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott, Carmel Loughland
2010 McCabe KL, Loughland CM, Nasir MA, Catts S, Jablensky A, Henskens FA, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB): Quality assurance and control for a comprehensive clinical, neuropsychological, genetic and neuroimaging database for researchers', Schizophrenia Research, Florence, Italy (2010) [E3]
Citations Web of Science - 8
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2009 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Deadlock detection views of distributed database', Proceedings of the 2009 Sixth International Conference on Information Technology: New Generations, Las Vegas, Nevada (2009) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/itng.2009.220
Citations Scopus - 10Web of Science - 4
2009 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Querying semistructured data with compression in distributed environments', Proceedings of the 2009 Sixth International Conference on Information Technology: New Generations, Las Vegas, Nevada (2009) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/itng.2009.221
Citations Scopus - 2Web of Science - 1
2009 Alom BMM, Henskens F, Hannaford M, 'Single vector large data cardinality structure to handle compressed database in a distributed environment', Communications in Computer and Information Science, Oporto, PORTUGAL (2009) [E1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-05201-9_12
Citations Scopus - 1
2009 Fernando I, Henskens FA, Cohen M, 'Developing a universal algorithm for clinical reasoning in Psychiatry', Proceedings ASPR09, Canberra, Australia (2009)
2009 Henskens FA, Carr VJ, Catts SV, Jablenski A, Michie PT, Loughland CM, et al., 'An Example of eResearch: The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank', Proceedings eResearch 2009, Sydney, Australia (2009)
Co-authors Pat Michie, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott
2009 Henskens FA, Loughland CM, Aphale MS, Paul D, Richards JM, Rasser P, et al., 'it support for the australian schizophrenia research bank', HEALTHINF 2009 - Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Health Informatics, Oporto, PORTUGAL (2009) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 1
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott
2009 Wallis MR, Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'WEB browser transactionality', WEBIST 2009: Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies, Lisboa, Portugal (2009) [E1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2009 Fernando I, Henskens FA, Cohen M, Athauda RI, 'Integrating clinical knowledge for automated reasoning and synthesis: Tapping the power of information technology into psychiatry', RANZCP NZ Conference: Conference Handbook, Rotorua, NZ (2009) [E3]
Co-authors Rukshan Athauda
2009 Carr VJ, Loughland CM, Catts S, Henskens FA, Jablensky A, Michie PT, et al., 'A database of comprehensive clinical, endophenotypic and genetic data for aetiological studies of schizophrenia', Schizophrenia Bulletin, San Diego, CA (2009) [E3]
DOI 10.1093/schbul/sbn173
Co-authors Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland
2009 Loughland CM, Richards J, Aphale M, Henskens FA, Carr VJ, Catts SV, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB): The development of an electronically delivered clinical assessment battery', Schizophrenia Bulletin, San Diego, CA (2009) [E3]
DOI 10.3109/00048674.2010.501758
Citations Scopus - 105
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Terry Lewin, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie
2009 Fernando I, Henskens F, Cohen M, 'A FRAMEWORK FOR KNOWLEDGE STORING, CONTEXT-SENSITIVE RETRIEVAL AND SYNTHESIS IN PSYCHIATRY', AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY (2009)
2009 Fernando I, Athauda RI, Cohen M, Henskens FA, Smith R, 'Towards data-oriented clinical information systems and data mining in psychiatry: Can they beat clinical trials?', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, Adelaide, SA (2009) [E3]
DOI 10.1080/00048670902940075
Co-authors Rukshan Athauda, Roger Smith
2009 Fernando I, Henskens FA, Cohen M, 'A framework for knowledge storing, context-sensitive retrieval and synthesis in psychiatry', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, Adelaide, SA (2009) [E3]
DOI 10.1080/00048670902940075
Co-authors Rukshan Athauda
2008 Carr VJ, Loughland CM, Catts SV, Henskens FA, Jablensky A, Michie PT, et al., 'A progress report on the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, Lorne, VIC (2008) [E3]
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott, Pat Michie, Carmel Loughland
2008 Loughland CM, Carr VJ, Lewin TJ, Tooney P, Catts S, Jablensky A, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB): Biobanking for schizophrenia research', Proceedings of the Australasian Biospecimen Network 6th Annual Meeting, Sydney, Australia (2008)
2008 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Application based meta tagging of network connections', Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Information Technology: New Generations, Las Vegas (2008) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/itng.2008.209
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2008 Paul DJ, Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Transaction support for interactive Web applications', Fourth International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies: Proceedings, Madeira, Portugal (2008) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 3
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2008 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Compressed database structure to manage large scale data in a distributed environment', ICSOFT 2008 - Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Software and Data Technologies, Porto, Portugal (2008) [E1]
2008 Alom BMM, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Storing semistructured data into relational database using reference relationship scheme', ICSOFT 2008 - Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Software and Data Technologies, Porto, Portugal (2008) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 1
2008 Richards J, Loughland CM, Aphale M, Henskens FA, Carr VJ, Catts SV, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB) computer-based clinical assessment software (CAS): Development and application', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, Newcastle, NSW (2008) [E3]
Co-authors Pat Michie, Terry Lewin, Carmel Loughland, Ulrich Schall, Rodney Scott
2008 Hector AJ, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'A software engineering process for BDI agents', Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Incheon, Korea (2008) [E1]
DOI 10.1007/978-3-540-78582-8_14
2007 Carr VJ, Loughland CM, Draganic B, Lewin TJ, Schall UA, Scott R, et al., 'The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB)', Schizophrenia Bulletin (Abstracts of the 11th International Congress on Schizophrenia Research), Colorado Springs, Colorado (2007) [E3]
Co-authors Ulrich Schall, Pat Michie, Rodney Scott, Terry Lewin, Carmel Loughland
2007 Loughland C, Michie PM, Stain H, Babcock J, Jablensky A, Draganic D, et al., 'The national recruitment and assessment of people with schizophrenia: The ASRB experience', Proceedings ASPR 2007, Melbourne, Australia (2007)
Co-authors Pat Michie, Ulrich Schall, Carmel Loughland, Terry Lewin, Rodney Scott
2007 Carr V, Schall U, Michie P, Scott R, Jablenski A, Mowry B, et al., 'An overview of the Australian schizophrenia research bank: Linking brain function and structure with genetics in a large sample of schizophrenia cases and controls', Proceedings, WPA International Congress 2007, Melbourne, Australia (2007)
2007 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'A system robust peer-to-peer communication with dynamic protocol selection', Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Computing, Applications and Technologies, Adelaide (2007) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/pdcat.2007.12
Citations Scopus - 2
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2007 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Hannaford MR, 'Isolation and Web services transactions', Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Computing, Applications and Technologies, Adelaide (2007) [E1]
DOI 10.1109/PDCAT.2007.29
Citations Scopus - 3Web of Science - 1
2007 Wallis MR, Henskens FA, 'WEWORM: An Ethical Worm Generation Toolkit', WEBIST 2007. 3rd International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies. Proceedings, Barcelona, Spain (2007) [E1]
Co-authors Mark Wallis
2007 Henskens FA, 'Web service transaction management', ICSOFT 2007: Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Software and Data Technologies, Barcelona, Spain (2007) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 5Web of Science - 1
2006 Paul DJ, Henskens FA, Johnston PJ, Hannaford MR, 'Portal-based Support for Mental Health Research', Papers presented at Grid Computing Environments Workshop, Supercomputing '06, IEEE Computer Society and ACM, Tampa, FL (2006) [E1]
2005 Henskens FA, Ashton MG, 'Co-existence of Transaction and Non Transaction-Managed Activity in a Persistent Object Store', 18th International Conference on Systems Engineering : ICSEng 2005 : 16-18 August 2005, Las Vegas, Nevada : Proceedings, Las Vegas, Nevada (2005) [E1]
2004 Ashton MG, Henskens FA, 'Directed dependency graph based concurrency control for persistent systems', Proceedings WOSSA 2004, Victor Harbor, SA, Australia (2004) [E1]
2003 Keedy JL, Menger G, Heinlein C, Henskens F, 'Qualifying types illustrated by synchronisation examples', OBJECTS, COMPONENTS, ARCHITECTURES, SERVICES, AND APPLICATIONS FOR A NETWORKED WORLD, ERFURT, GERMANY (2003) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 10Web of Science - 8
2001 Katsikitis M, Byrne T, Henskens FA, Johnson P, 'A novel software interface for the FACEM Facial Parameterization System', Proceedings, FACS2001, Innsbruck, Austria (2001)
2000 Henskens FA, Johnston P, McGowan W, 'Multi-level Neural Modelling: An Application of Object Oriented Software Engineering', Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (2000) [E1]
2000 Henskens FA, Ashton MG, 'Unified Support for Stability and Bulk Data in a Persistent Store', Proceedings of the IASTED International Conference, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (2000) [E1]
1998 Henskens FA, Ashton M, 'Congeries, Mapping and Grasshopper', Proceedings of Fifth IDEA International Workshop, Fremantle, Western Australia (1998)
1997 Flanagan M, Fekete A, Henskens F, Rosenberg J, 'Dynamically Configurable Concurrency Control for a Persistent Store', Persistent Object Systems - Principles and Practice, San Francisco (1997) [E1]
Citations Web of Science - 1
1997 Ashton M, Henskens FA, 'Data Positioning for Bulk Data Storage in Persistent Systems', Proceedings of the Fourth IDEA International Workshop, Magnetic Island, Australia (1997) [E1]
1997 Henskens F, Ashton M, 'Persistent Databases That Perform?', Proceedings, IASTED International Conference on Software Engineering SE ''97, San Francisco (1997) [E1]
1997 Summons P, Coldwell J, Bruff C, Henskens F, 'Automated Assessment and Marking of Spreadsheet Concepts', Proceedings, Second Australasian Conference on Computer Science Education, ACM SIGCSE, Melbourne (1997) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 6
Co-authors Peter Summons
1997 Summons P, Coldwell J, Henskens F, Bruff C, 'Automated Evaluation of Spreadsheet Concepts - Excel in Action', Proceedings, The Second Annual NSW Symposium on Information Technology and Information Systems, Sydney (1997) [E1]
1996 Ashton M, Henskens F, 'Databases on Persistent Systems', Proceedings of the 3rd IDEA International Workshop, Lamington National Park (1996) [E1]
1996 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Stable-Copy Replication of Highly Available Stable Distributed Persistent Stores', Proceedings of the Second Iranian Computer Society Conference (ICSC''96), Amir Kabir University of Technology (1996) [E1]
1996 Flanagan M, Fekete A, Henskens F, Rosenberg J, 'A Tailorable Conflict Manager for Flexible Concurrency Control', Proceedings, 1996 International Conference on Intelligent Information Systems, Washington DC (1996) [E1]
1995 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Entity Dependency in Stable Distributed Persistent Stores', Proceedings of the 28th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Hawaii (1995) [E1]
1995 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Reducing the Extent of Cascadable Operations in Stable Distributed Stores', Proceedings, 18th Australian Computer Science Conference, Adelaide (1995) [E1]
1995 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Management of Inter-Entity Dependencies Using Directed Dependency Graphs', Proceedings, First Annual Computer Society of Iran Computer Conference, Tehran (1995) [E1]
1995 Jalili R, Henskens FA, 'Using directed graphs to describe entity dependency in stable distributed persistent stores', Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (1995)

In a persistent object store, the acts of modifying data and reading modified data result in the creation of dependencies between the modifying process and the data. Dependencies ... [more]

In a persistent object store, the acts of modifying data and reading modified data result in the creation of dependencies between the modifying process and the data. Dependencies may be represented using sets, and over time these may grow to encompass many objects and processes. Checkpoint and roll-back operations must propagate to all elements in such a set. This paper presents a new notation for representing dependencies, and shows that differentiating between the dependencies created by modifying data and reading modified data reduces the extent of propagation of checkpoint and roll-back operations.

DOI 10.1109/HICSS.1995.375490
Citations Scopus - 3
1994 Dearle A, Bona RD, Farrow J, Henskens FA, Lindström A, Norris S, et al., 'Protection in Grasshopper: A Persistent Operating System.', POS (1994)
1994 Dibona R, Dearle A, Farrow JM, Henskens FA, Lindstrom A, Rosenberg J, Vaughan F, 'Generic Interface for Configurable Disk I/O Systems', Proceedings, 17th Australian Computer Science Conference, Christchurch (1994) [E1]
1994 Lindstrom A, Dearle A, Dibona R, Farrow JM, Henskens FA, Rosenberg J, Vaughan F, 'A Model for User-Level Memory Management in a Distributed Persistent Environment', Proceedings, 17th Australian Computer Science Conference, Christchurch (1994) [E1]
1994 Vaughan F, Dearle A, Cao J, Dibona R, Farrow JM, Henskens FA, et al., 'Causality Considerations in Distributed Persistent Operating Systems', Proceedings, 17th Australian Computer Science Conference, Christchurch (1994) [E1]
1994 Jalili R, Henskens FA, Rosenberg J, Koch DM, 'Operating System Support for Object Dependencies in Persistent Object Stores', Proceedings, International Workshop on Object-Oriented Real-Time Dependable Systems, Dana Point (1994) [E1]
1994 Henskens FA, Koch DM, Jalili R, Rosenberg J, 'Hardware Support for Stability in a Persistent Architecture', Workshops in Computing (1994) [E1]
1993 Henskens FA, Broessler P, Keedy JL, Rosenberg J, 'Transparent Distribution Using Two Object Granularities', Proceedings, European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Kaiserslauten (1993) [E1]
1993 Flanagan M, Fekete A, Henskens FA, Rosenberg J, 'A Testbed for Experiments with Concurrency Control Primitives in Persistent Systems', Proceedings, Third International Conference on Object Orientation in Operating Systems, Ashville (1993) [E1]
1993 Henskens FA, Broessler P, Keedy JL, Rosenberg J, 'Coarse and Fine Grain Objects in a Distributed Persistent Store', Proceedings, Third International Workshop on Object Orientation in Operating Systems, Ashville (1993) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 1
1992 Henskens FA, 'Addressing Moved Modules in a Capability-based Distributed Shared Memory', Proceedings of the 25th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (1992) [E1]
1992 Dearle A, Rosenberg J, Henskens FA, Vaughan F, Maciunas K, 'An Examination of Operating System Support for Persistent Object Systems', Proceedings of the 25th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, Hawaii, USA (1992) [E1]
1992 Dearle A, Di Bona R, Farrow JM, Henskens FA, Lindstrom A, Rosenberg J, 'Grasshopper - A Persistent Operating System for Conventional Hardware', Proceedings, 2nd International Workshop on Object Orientation in Operating Systems, Dourdan, France (1992) [E1]
Citations Scopus - 4
1991 Henskens FA, Rosenberg J, Keedy JL, 'A Capability-based Distributed Shared Memory', Proceedings of the 14th Australian Computer Science Conference (1991) [E1]
1990 Rosenberg J, Henskens FA, Brown AL, Morrison R, Munro D, 'Stability in a Persistent Store Based on a Large Virtual Memory', Proceedings of the International Workshop on Architectural Support for Security and Persistence of Information, Bremen, Germany (1990) [E1]
1990 Henskens FA, Rosenberg J, Brown AL, 'Stability in a Network of MONADS-PC Computers', Proceedings of the International Workshop on Computer Architectures to support Security and Persistence of Information (1990) [E1]
1987 Broessler P, Henskens FA, Keedy JL, Rosenberg J, 'Addressing Objects in a Very Large Distributed Virtual Memory', Distributed Processing: Proceedings of the IFIP WWG 10.3 Working Conference, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (1987)
Show 126 more conferences

Patent (1 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2003 Giffard PM, Schilling HJ, Thiruvenkataswamy V, Huygens F, Price EP, Henskens FA, Robertson GA, Assessing Data Sets, European Patent Office, WO03079241, Sept 2003 (2003) [I1]

Preprint (1 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
2023 Rootes-Murdy K, Panta S, Kelly R, Romero J, Quidé Y, Cairns M, et al., 'Cortical Similarities in Psychiatric and Mood Disorders Identified in Federated VBM Analysis via COINSTAC (2023)
DOI 10.1101/2023.09.28.23296219
Co-authors Carmel Loughland, Rodney Scott, Murray Cairns, Pat Michie, William Reay Uon

Thesis / Dissertation (1 outputs)

Year Citation Altmetrics Link
1992 Henskens FA, A Capability-based Persistent Distributed Shared Memory, University of Newcastle (1992)
Edit

Grants and Funding

Summary

Number of grants 41
Total funding $11,162,092

Click on a grant title below to expand the full details for that specific grant.


20181 grants / $513,627

A randomised controlled trial of an online peer support intervention for reducing symptoms of depression among community-dwelling older adults living in rural Australia$513,627

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Allison Boyes, Professor Sally Chan, Doctor Alix Hall, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Doctor Lisa Mackenzie, Mr Simon Deeming, Ms Indra Arunachalam
Scheme Targeted Call for Research - Depression, anxiety and suicide among elderly Australians
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2018
Funding Finish 2021
GNo G1700853
Type Of Funding C1100 - Aust Competitive - NHMRC
Category 1100
UON Y

20172 grants / $2,195,911

A multi-component web-based intervention to improve the wellbeing of people with dementia and their carers: a randomised controlled trial$1,360,623

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Amy Waller, Doctor Eamonn Eeles, Doctor Allison Boyes, Professor Liz Holliday, Professor Sally Chan, Mr Simon Deeming, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Professor Ulises Cortes, Professor Xavier Girones
Scheme Boosting Dementia Research Grants
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2017
Funding Finish 2021
GNo G1700013
Type Of Funding C1100 - Aust Competitive - NHMRC
Category 1100
UON Y

Improving outcomes for people with depression in community settings: A cluster RCT$835,288

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Professor Mariko Carey, Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Professor Nicholas Zwar, Associate Professor Danielle Mazza, Professor Graham Meadows, Doctor Amy Waller, Professor Leon Piterman, Professor Brian Kelly, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Project Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2017
Funding Finish 2021
GNo G1600063
Type Of Funding C1100 - Aust Competitive - NHMRC
Category 1100
UON Y

20164 grants / $332,334

A randomised controlled trial of the effectiveness of ‘Enable Me’: an e-health innovation for stroke survivors and support persons.$254,702

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Amy Waller, Professor Mariko Carey, Conjoint Professor Chris Levi, Associate Professor Michael Pollack, Professor Chris Doran, Doctor Christopher Oldmeadow, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Partnership Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2016
Funding Finish 2020
GNo G1500867
Type Of Funding C1100 - Aust Competitive - NHMRC
Category 1100
UON Y

Supporting family carers of people living with dementia: an RCT of a new mobile application$46,188

Funding body: Dementia Collaborative Research Centres

Funding body Dementia Collaborative Research Centres
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Professor Sally Chan, Ms Viki Brummell, Dr AMANDA Wilson, Doctor Sharyn Hunter, Associate Professor Sarah Jeong, Emeritus Professor Kichu Nair, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Research Project
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2016
Funding Finish 2016
GNo G1600156
Type Of Funding C2200 - Aust Commonwealth – Other
Category 2200
UON Y

A randomised controlled trial of the effectiveness of ‘Enable Me’: an e-health innovation for stroke survivors and support persons.$29,444

Funding body: National Stroke Foundation

Funding body National Stroke Foundation
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Amy Waller, Professor Mariko Carey, Conjoint Professor Chris Levi, Dr Michael Pollack, Professor Chris Doran, Doctor Christopher Oldmeadow, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Partnership Projects Partner Funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2016
Funding Finish 2019
GNo G1501095
Type Of Funding C3200 – Aust Not-for Profit
Category 3200
UON Y

Award for Supervision Excellence$2,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Award for Supervision Excellence
Role Lead
Funding Start 2016
Funding Finish 2016
GNo G1501448
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20144 grants / $1,335,564

Renewing Intersect's share of the National Computational Infrastructure's peak facility$1,025,000

The rapid and continuing growth of supercomputing capabilities presents major new opportunities for scientific and engineering research. This project aims to allow world-leading computational researchers across the Intersect consortium of 11 universities to take advantage of these opportunities by renewing their partner share access to the National Computational Infrastructure facilities, notably a new petaflop-capable supercomputer and associated expert support. This access will enable the consortium's researchers to tackle grand challenge research problems in a diverse range of fields of national priority including frontier technologies, the environment, and promoting good health.

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team

Evatt Hawkes

Scheme LIEF
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2014
Funding Finish 2014
GNo
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON N

Who decides and at what cost? Comparing patient, surrogate and oncologist perspectives on end of life care$260,564

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Emeritus Professor Neil Rees, Ms Gill Batt, Doctor Charles Douglas, Professor Ian Olver, Doctor Nick Zdenkowski, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Partnership Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2014
Funding Finish 2017
GNo G1300011
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

Renewing Intersect's share of the National Computational Infrastructure's peak facility$40,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Evatt Hawkes, Professor Marc Wilkins, Assoc. Prof Aibing Yu, Professor Michael Ferry, Dr Graham Ball, Professor Geraint Lewis, Professor Dietmar Muller, Professor Leo Radom, Professor Catherine Stampfl, Dr Jeffrey Reimers, Associate Professor Christopher Poulton, Associate Professor Michael Ford, Dr Adel Rahmani, Dr Matthew Arnold, Dr Kei-Wai Cheung, Professor Mark Johnson, Associate Professor Orsola De Marco, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Conjoint Professor Bogdan Dlugogorski, Conjoint Professor Peter Greer, Dr Haibo Yu, Professor Willy Susilo, Professor Abdulkadir Sajeev, Associate Professor Cedric Gondro, Associate Professor Chunhui Yang, Dr Ming Zhao, Professor Graham King, Professor Terry Bossomaier, Professor Arthur Georges, Bossomaier, Terry, Cheung, Kei-Wai, Georges, Arthur, Hawkes, Evatt, King, Graham, Lewis, Geraint, Poulton, Christopher, Sajeev, Abdulkadir, Yang, Chunhui, Yu, Haibo
Scheme Equipment Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2014
Funding Finish 2014
GNo G1300203
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

A regional primary care based intervention to encourage colorectal cancer screening in those not responding to current national screening initiatives. $10,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Christopher Oldmeadow, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Associate Professor Marita Lynagh
Scheme Near Miss Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2014
Funding Finish 2014
GNo G1301403
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20134 grants / $373,959

A randomised controlled trial of online versus telephone-based information and support: Can electronic platforms deliver effective care for lung cancer patients?$175,000

Funding body: Cancer Council NSW

Funding body Cancer Council NSW
Project Team Professor Christine Paul, Doctor Allison Boyes, Ms Paula Vallentine, Professor Amanda Baker, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Dr Ian Roos, Doctor Patrick McElduff, Doctor Tara Clinton-McHarg
Scheme Partnership Projects Partner Funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2013
Funding Finish 2015
GNo G1200784
Type Of Funding C3200 – Aust Not-for Profit
Category 3200
UON Y

Who decides and at what cost? Comparing patient, surrogate and oncologist perspectives on end of life care$130,303

Funding body: Cancer Council NSW

Funding body Cancer Council NSW
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Emeritus Professor Neil Rees, Ms Gill Batt, Doctor Charles Douglas, Professor Ian Olver, Doctor Nick Zdenkowski, Doctor Scott Twaddell, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Partnership Projects Partner Funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2013
Funding Finish 2016
GNo G1300851
Type Of Funding Grant - Aust Non Government
Category 3AFG
UON Y

Providing tailored web-based information to support colorectal cancer patients in their preparation for and recovery from surgery: A feasibility study$48,656

Funding body: Cancer Institute NSW

Funding body Cancer Institute NSW
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Steve Smith, Doctor Sancha Robinson, Ms Gill Batt, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Conjoint Associate Professor Ross Kerridge, Doctor Christopher Oldmeadow, Doctor Peter Pockney, Doctor Christopher Hayes
Scheme Evidence to Practice Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2013
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1300868
Type Of Funding Other Public Sector - State
Category 2OPS
UON Y

Reducing psychosocial burden among women diagnosed with breast cancer and their support persons: A randomised controlled trial of a web-based intervention.$20,000

Funding body: Hunter Medical Research Institute

Funding body Hunter Medical Research Institute
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Doctor Charles Douglas, Doctor Jamie Bryant, Professor Mariko Carey, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Near Miss
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2013
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1300705
Type Of Funding Grant - Aust Non Government
Category 3AFG
UON Y

20122 grants / $428,542

A randomised controlled trial of online versus telephone-based information and support: Can electronic platforms deliver effective care for lung cancer patients?$408,542

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Professor Christine Paul, Doctor Allison Boyes, Ms Paula Vallentine, Professor Amanda Baker, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Dr Ian Roos, Doctor Patrick McElduff, Doctor Tara Clinton-McHarg
Scheme Partnership Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2012
Funding Finish 2016
GNo G1200758
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

Evaluating the acceptability of a web-based approach to improve knowledge transfer to general practice regarding care for sleep disorders $20,000

Funding body: Sleep Health Foundation

Funding body Sleep Health Foundation
Project Team Professor Christine Paul, Emeritus Professor Michael Hensley, Doctor Jeffrey Pretto, Professor Mariko Carey, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Doctor Tara Clinton-McHarg
Scheme Research Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2012
Funding Finish 2012
GNo G1100881
Type Of Funding Grant - Aust Non Government
Category 3AFG
UON Y

20115 grants / $1,680,254

Flexible architecture high-performance computing facility for the Intersect consortium of New South Wales$500,000

This new supercomputing facility is an important addition to the nation's research infrastructure and will enable world-leading, New South Wales researchers to continue their ground breaking work in increasingly competitive environments. Much of the research to be undertaken at the facility lies in areas of national priority, including frontier technologies and environmental sustainability.

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team

Leo Radom

Scheme Linkage Infrastructure Equipment & Facilities (LIEF)
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2011
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N

The role of individual patient, social support and treatment centre variables in the psychosocial outcomes of cancer patients$494,604

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Laureate Professor Robert Sanson-Fisher, Professor Mariko Carey, Professor Ian Olver, Professor Christine Paul, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Project Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G1000303
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB)$440,650

The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank is a nationwide collaboration of Australian scientists commited to creating the world's biggest resource of genetic, clinical and neuroimaging data on schizophrenia as well as a resource of volunteers willing to be involved in schizophrenia research.

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team

Professor Vaughan Carr

Scheme Extension of Enabling Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2012
GNo
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON N

Data Capture for the Data Commons$200,000

Funding body: Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research

Funding body Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Australian National Data Service
Role Lead
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2012
GNo G1100054
Type Of Funding Other Public Sector - Commonwealth
Category 2OPC
UON Y

Flexible architecture High Performance Computing facility for the Intersect consortium of NSW$45,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Leo Radom, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Laureate Professor Jon Borwein
Scheme Equipment Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2011
Funding Finish 2011
GNo G1000459
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20101 grants / $7,162

Perkin-Elmer Janus Liquid Handling Workstation (Mini 4-Tip Platform)$7,162

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team

Prof Vaughan Carr

Scheme Equipment Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2010
Funding Finish 2010
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N

20093 grants / $524,800

A High Performance Computing Cluster and Storage for the INTERSECT Consortium of NSW$500,000

A High Performance Computing Cluster and Storage for the INTERSECT Consortium of NSW

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team

Prof Lindsay Botton

Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2009
Funding Finish 2009
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N

Shared mass storage device and backup media$16,800

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team Professor Juanita Todd, Dr BILL Budd, Professor Frini Karayanidis, Doctor Janette Smith, Mr David McKenzie, Emeritus Professor Patricia Michie, Prof ULLI Schall, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Conjoint Professor Vaughan Carr
Scheme Equipment Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2009
Funding Finish 2009
GNo G0189847
Type Of Funding Other Public Sector - Commonwealth
Category 2OPC
UON Y

Design of integrated environmental field data management system$8,000

Funding body: Odour Control Systems (Aust) Pty Ltd

Funding body Odour Control Systems (Aust) Pty Ltd
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Project Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2009
Funding Finish 2009
GNo G0189932
Type Of Funding Grant - Aust Non Government
Category 3AFG
UON Y

20081 grants / $5,000

A Compiler to Support the Novel Features of the Timor Programming Language$5,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle - Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment

Funding body University of Newcastle - Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment
Project Team Dr MICHAEL Hannaford, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Pilot Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2008
Funding Finish 2008
GNo G0189149
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20073 grants / $675,685

Technical Officer to Support the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB)$438,985

Funding body: Schizophrenia Research Institute

Funding body Schizophrenia Research Institute
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Doctor Carmel Loughland
Scheme Research Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2007
Funding Finish 2013
GNo G0187035
Type Of Funding Grant - Aust Non Government
Category 3AFG
UON Y

Grid Research: Technical Officer to Support the Australia Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB)$235,000

Funding body: Neuroscience Institute of Schizophrenia and Allied Disorders

Funding body Neuroscience Institute of Schizophrenia and Allied Disorders
Project Team

Dr Frans A Henskens

Scheme Unknown
Role Lead
Funding Start 2007
Funding Finish 2007
GNo
Type Of Funding Other Public Sector - State
Category 2OPS
UON N

International Conference on Software and Data Technologies 2007 (ICSOFT07), Barcelona, Spain, 22/7/2007 - 25/7/2007$1,700

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Travel Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 2007
Funding Finish 2007
GNo G0187943
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20062 grants / $2,149,000

Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank$1,750,000

The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank collects and links genetic, neuroanatomical, cognitive and clinical information from people with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and non-psychiatric control volunteers to support research into the genetics of schizophrenia.

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team

Prof Vaughan Carr

Scheme Enabling Grants - Special Facilities
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2006
Funding Finish 2011
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N

Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank (ASRB)$399,000

The Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank collects and links genetic, neuroanatomical, cognitive and clinical information from people with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and non-psychiatric control volunteers to support research into the genetics of schizophrenia.

Funding body: NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)

Funding body NHMRC (National Health & Medical Research Council)
Project Team

Prof Vaughan Carr

Scheme IRIISS Infrastructure Funding
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2006
Funding Finish 2010
GNo
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON N

20053 grants / $118,254

Application for funding to develop a software grid for data-sharing associated with the NISAD/LONI Virtual Brain Bank$95,254

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Mr Patrick Johnston, Mr Paul Rasser, Associate Professor Philip Ward, Prof ULLI Schall, Emeritus Professor Patricia Michie, Conjoint Professor Vaughan Carr
Scheme Special Research Initiatives E-Research
Role Lead
Funding Start 2005
Funding Finish 2006
GNo G0185366
Type Of Funding Aust Competitive - Commonwealth
Category 1CS
UON Y

The Australian EEG Database - Infrastructure Support$20,000

Funding body: Hunter Medical Research Institute

Funding body Hunter Medical Research Institute
Project Team Emeritus Professor Patricia Michie, Conjoint Associate Professor Mick Hunter, Emeritus Professor John Rostas, Conjoint Associate Professor David Williams, Professor Pablo Moscato, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme HMRI Brain and Mental Health Research Program
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2005
Funding Finish 2005
GNo G0185719
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON Y

Australasian Computer Science Week (ACSW'05)$3,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Professor Regina Berretta, Dr MICHAEL Hannaford, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Professor Pablo Moscato, Dr Richard Webber
Scheme Conference Establishment Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2005
Funding Finish 2005
GNo G0184971
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20011 grants / $5,000

Distributed Accounting System: A Technology Demonstrator for Software and Data Engineering for Smartcards.$5,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Associate Professor Abdulkadir Sajeev, Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens
Scheme Project Grant
Role Investigator
Funding Start 2001
Funding Finish 2001
GNo G0179993
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

20001 grants / $12,000

Developing a software simulation environment for neurocognitive and neurobiological modelling.$12,000

Funding body: University of Newcastle

Funding body University of Newcastle
Project Team Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens, Mr Patrick Johnston
Scheme Internal Research Support
Role Lead
Funding Start 2000
Funding Finish 2000
GNo G0179709
Type Of Funding Internal
Category INTE
UON Y

19951 grants / $165,000

A persistent platform for conventional architectures$165,000

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team

John Rosenberg

Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 1995
Funding Finish 1997
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N

19932 grants / $475,000

A persistent platform for conventional architectures$340,000

Funding body: Digital Equipment Corporation

Funding body Digital Equipment Corporation
Project Team

Dr Frans Henskens

Scheme ALPHA Innovators Grant
Role Lead
Funding Start 1993
Funding Finish 1993
GNo
Type Of Funding Contract - Aust Non Government
Category 3AFC
UON N

Concurrency control and resilience for generic persistent stores$135,000

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team

Prof John Rosenberg

Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 1993
Funding Finish 1995
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N

19921 grants / $165,000

A persistent platform for conventional architectures$165,000

Funding body: ARC (Australian Research Council)

Funding body ARC (Australian Research Council)
Project Team

John Rosenberg

Scheme Discovery Projects
Role Investigator
Funding Start 1992
Funding Finish 1994
GNo
Type Of Funding Not Known
Category UNKN
UON N
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Research Supervision

Number of supervisions

Completed18
Current0

Past Supervision

Year Level of Study Research Title Program Supervisor Type
2019 PhD Model-Driven Engineering to Enhance the Reliability of Software Development by Verifying System Properties and Detecting Clones PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2019 PhD Secure Module Invocation System (SMIS): A Study of Program Execution in a Secure Operating System Environment PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2018 PhD Modelling and Simulation of a New Cloud Computing Platform Based on the SPEEDOS Operating System PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2017 PhD An Approach to Formalisation of Clinical Reasoning in Medicine: A Case study in Psychiatry PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2015 PhD Component-based Runtime Environment for Cross-Platform Applications PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2014 PhD Cooperative Reinforcement Learning for Independent Learners PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Co-Supervisor
2014 PhD A Software Development Process for BDI Multiagent Systems PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2013 PhD Pedagogical-Based Learning Object System to Support Self-Regulated Learning of Computer Science PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2012 PhD Deliberate Cooperation in Service-Oriented Environments: Dynamic Transactional Workflows for Web Services PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2011 PhD Data Management and Query Processing for Semistructured and Structured Databases PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2010 PhD Advances in Cluster Editing: Linear FPT Kernels and Comparative Implementations PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Principal Supervisor
2006 Honours WEWORM: A Benevolent Worm Computr Sc Not Elswhere Class, University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2004 PhD Management of Data, Access and Concurrency in Persistant Systems PhD (Computer Science), College of Engineering, Science and Environment, The University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2003 Honours Computer-aided Identification of Highly Informative Bacterial SNPS Computr Sc Not Elswhere Class, University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2002 Honours Kernel Compiler for Speedos Compiler Construction, University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2002 Honours Speedos Program Interface Computr Sc Not Elswhere Class, University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2002 Honours FaceXpress Computer Graphics, University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
2000 Honours Neu-Model: A multi-level object-oriented dynamic emulation laboratory Computr Sc Not Elswhere Class, University of Newcastle Sole Supervisor
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Conjoint Professor Frans Henskens

Position

Honorary Professor
Distributed Computing Research Group
School of Medicine and Public Health
College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

Focus area

Computer Science and Software Engineering

Contact Details

Email frans.henskens@newcastle.edu.au

Office

Location Callaghan
University Drive
Callaghan, NSW 2308
Australia
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