Repository Summary January 2017

Below you will find a summary of UWL Repository activity for January 2017. We will provide this data each month, showing the most talked about outputs (highest Altmetric scores) and the most downloaded outputs. Links to these papers are included below so you access these via our open access repository.

The top 5 most downloaded outputs for January 2017:

1. Hunter, Louise (2014) Supporting teenage mothers to initiate breast feeding and developing a support intervention to increase breast feeding rates in a vulnerable group – the importance of place. Doctoral thesis, University of West London.

2. Lorimer, Ray (2014) The attitudes and behaviour of hotel chefs and chef lecturers regarding the use of convenience ingredients. Masters thesis, University of West London.

3. Hine, Benjamin A. (2016) ‘The invisible man’. In: Avon & Somerset Constabulary Annual Conference, 3rd February 2016, Bristol, UK.

4. Berridge, Graham (2015) Event experiences: design, management and impact. Doctoral thesis, University of West London.

5. Fellowes, David (2011) Compilation of menus, including chefs’ notes. Documentation. University of West London. (Unpublished)

The top 3 most talked about papers:

1. Hester, Helen, Jones, Bethan and Taylor-Harman, Sarah (2015) Giffing a fuck: non-narrative pleasures in participatory porn cultures and female fandom. Porn Studies, 2 (4). pp. 356-366.

2. Pettit, Sophie, Bowers, Len, Tulloch, Alex, Cullen, Alexis E., Moylan, Lois Biggin, Sethi, Faisil, McCrone, Paul, Baker, John, Quirk, Alan and Stewart, Duncan (2016) Acceptability and use of coercive methods across differing service configurations with and without seclusion and/or psychiatric intensive care units. Journal of Advanced Nursing.

3. Curran, Evonne T., Wilson, Jennie, Haig, Caroline E., McCowan, Colin, Leonard, Alistair and Loveday, Heather (2016) The Where is Norovirus Control Lost (WINCL) study: an enhanced surveillance project to identify norovirus index cases in care settings in the UK and Ireland. Journal of Infection Prevention, 17 (1). pp. 8-14.

Our data is provided by EPrints (via the UWL Repository), IRUS-UK, and Altmetric.