Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search


Welcome to Repository@Nottingham

The Repository@Nottingham is intended to be an Open Access showcase for the published research output of the university. Whenever possible, refereed documents accepted for publication, or finished artistic compositions presented in public, will be made available here in full digital format, and hyperlinks to standard published versions will be provided. See our Policies for further information.



Latest Additions

Differentiating between harm to users and third parties in the UK’s Online Safety regulations: The phenomena of TikTok Frenzies (2024)
Presentation / Conference
Colegate, E. (2024, April). Differentiating between harm to users and third parties in the UK’s Online Safety regulations: The phenomena of TikTok Frenzies. Paper presented at Conference Name: 'Digital and Green: Twin Transitions?' British and Irish Law Education and Technology Association 39th Annual Conference, Dublin, Ireland

When concentrated discussion centres on online harms and the harms experienced online as a consequence of interactions, research and regulatory initiatives focus on the individual user interacting with the content. Whilst it is well documented that t... Read More about Differentiating between harm to users and third parties in the UK’s Online Safety regulations: The phenomena of TikTok Frenzies.

Development and validation of a new algorithm for improved cardiovascular risk prediction (2024)
Journal Article
Hippisley-Cox, J., Coupland, C. A. C., Bafadhel, M., Russell, R. E. K., Sheikh, A., Brindle, P., & Channon, K. M. (2024). Development and validation of a new algorithm for improved cardiovascular risk prediction. Nature Medicine, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-02905-y

QRISK algorithms use data from millions of people to help clinicians identify individuals at high risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Here, we derive and externally validate a new algorithm, which we have named QR4, that incorporates novel risk fac... Read More about Development and validation of a new algorithm for improved cardiovascular risk prediction.

A mixed-methods study of women's birthplace preferences and decisions in England (2024)
Journal Article
Clancy, G., Boardman, F., & Rees, S. (in press). A mixed-methods study of women's birthplace preferences and decisions in England. Women and Birth,

Problem: Choice has been a key aspect of maternity care policy in England since 1993, however a gap remains between the birthplaces women want and where they actually give birth. Background: The latest maternity care policy in England acknowledges... Read More about A mixed-methods study of women's birthplace preferences and decisions in England.

A Passive Urban Revolution (2024)
Other
Cowan, T. (2024). A Passive Urban Revolution

This response builds on the critical insights and interventions provided here, elaborating how Subaltern Frontiers might provide a useful lens to explore the unsettled geographies of passive revolution on India’s urban frontier.

Explore these research themes