275(top 100%)
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23.5K(top 1%)
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80(top 100%)
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276 PR articles • 25,038 PR citations • Sorted by year • Download PDF (PDF by citations)
#ArticleIFPR CitationsLinks
1Activity-based and agent-based transport model of Melbourne: an open multi-modal transport simulation model for Greater Melbourne3.77Citations (PDF)
2More People, More Active, More Often for Heart Health – Taking Action on Physical Activity
Global Heart, 2024, 19,
2.715Citations (PDF)
3The built environment and early childhood development: qualitative evidence from disadvantaged Australian communities
Children's Geographies, 2023, 21, 330-346
2.13Citations (PDF)
4Building the road network for city-scale active transport simulation models4.024Citations (PDF)
5Active transport research priorities for Australia2.815Citations (PDF)
6Achieving ‘Active’ 30 Minute Cities: How Feasible Is It to Reach Work within 30 Minutes Using Active Transport Modes?2.634Citations (PDF)
7Exploring the design, quality and use of communal areas in apartment developments
Cities and Health, 2022, 6, 480-494
2.011Citations (PDF)
8Using open data and open-source software to develop spatial indicators of urban design and transport features for achieving healthy and sustainable cities
The Lancet Global Health, 2022, 10, e907-e918
14.0127Citations (PDF)
9What next? Expanding our view of city planning and global health, and implementing and monitoring evidence-informed policy
The Lancet Global Health, 2022, 10, e919-e926
14.0125Citations (PDF)
10City planning policies to support health and sustainability: an international comparison of policy indicators for 25 cities
The Lancet Global Health, 2022, 10, e882-e894
14.0165Citations (PDF)
11Determining thresholds for spatial urban design and transport features that support walking to create healthy and sustainable cities: findings from the IPEN Adult study
The Lancet Global Health, 2022, 10, e895-e906
14.0105Citations (PDF)
12Exploring inequities in housing affordability through an analysis of walkability and house prices by neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage
Cities and Health, 2022, 6, 616-634
2.013Citations (PDF)
13Policy-Relevant Spatial Indicators of Urban Liveability And Sustainability: Scaling From Local to Global
Urban Policy and Research, 2022, 40, 321-334
2.18Citations (PDF)
14Spatial and socioeconomic inequities in liveability in Australia’s 21 largest cities: Does city size matter?
Health and Place, 2022, 78, 102899
3.823Citations (PDF)
15Cohort Profile: HABITAT—a longitudinal multilevel study of physical activity, sedentary behaviour and health and functioning in mid-to-late adulthood5.134Citations (PDF)
16Safe Habitats: Does the Association Between Neighborhood Crime and Walking Differ by Neighborhood Disadvantage?
Environment and Behavior, 2021, 53, 3-39
3.822Citations (PDF)
17The life and death of residential dissonants in transit-oriented development: A discrete time survival analysis5.811Citations (PDF)
18Defining pathways to healthy sustainable urban development
Environment International, 2021, 146, 106236
10.3205Citations (PDF)
19Australia in 2030: what is our path to health for all?1.851Citations (PDF)
20Urban Densification and Physical Activity Change: A 12-Year Longitudinal Study of Australian Adults
American Journal of Epidemiology, 2021, 190, 2116-2123
3.410Citations (PDF)
21Heart healthy cities: genetics loads the gun but the environment pulls the trigger
European Heart Journal, 2021, 42, 2422-2438
2.3113Citations (PDF)
22A cross-sectional and longitudinal study of neighbourhood disadvantage and cardiovascular disease and the mediating role of physical activity
Preventive Medicine, 2021, 147, 106506
2.912Citations (PDF)
23Supporting pandemic disease preparedness: Development of a composite index of area vulnerability
Health and Place, 2021, 70, 102629
3.810Citations (PDF)
24Findings from the Kids in Communities Study (KiCS): A mixed methods study examining community-level influences on early childhood development
PLoS ONE, 2021, 16, e0256431
2.410Citations (PDF)
25Cross-sectional evidence of the cardiometabolic health benefits of urban liveability in Australia8.111Citations (PDF)
26Testing the Impact of a Planning Policy Based on New Urbanist Planning Principles on Residents’ Sense of Community and Mental Health in Perth, Western Australia
Environment and Behavior, 2020, 52, 305-339
3.819Citations (PDF)
27Achieving the SDGs: Evaluating indicators to be used to benchmark and monitor progress towards creating healthy and sustainable cities
Health Policy, 2020, 124, 581-590
2.9164Citations (PDF)
28Spatial biases in residential mobility: Implications for travel behaviour research5.423Citations (PDF)
29The high life: A policy audit of apartment design guidelines and their potential to promote residents' health and wellbeing
Cities, 2020, 96, 102420
6.145Citations (PDF)
30Liveability aspirations and realities: Implementation of urban policies designed to create healthy cities in Australia
Social Science and Medicine, 2020, 245, 112713
4.351Citations (PDF)
31Could smart research ensure healthy people in disrupted cities?2.813Citations (PDF)
32Communal area design in apartment buildings: development and comparison of a desktop and on-the-ground landscape assessment tool
Cities and Health, 2020, , 1-15
2.06Citations (PDF)
33Longitudinal impact of changes in the residential built environment on physical activity: findings from the ENABLE London cohort study4.617Citations (PDF)
34Weekend and weekday associations between the residential built environment and physical activity: Findings from the ENABLE London study
PLoS ONE, 2020, 15, e0237323
2.412Citations (PDF)
35Evaluating the effect of change in the built environment on mental health and subjective well-being: a natural experiment3.117Citations (PDF)
36Positive HABITATS for physical activity: Examining use of parks and its contribution to physical activity levels in mid-to older-aged adults
Health and Place, 2020, 63, 102308
3.849Citations (PDF)
37Living liveable? RESIDE's evaluation of the “Liveable Neighborhoods” planning policy on the health supportive behaviors and wellbeing of residents in Perth, Western Australia
SSM - Population Health, 2020, 10, 100538
2.423Citations (PDF)
38The effect of moving to East Village, the former London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Athletes' Village, on mode of travel (ENABLE London study, a natural experiment)4.68Citations (PDF)
39The effect of moving to East Village, the former London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games Athletes' Village, on physical activity and adiposity (ENABLE London): a cohort study
Lancet Public Health, The, 2019, 4, e421-e430
19.516Citations (PDF)
40Urban Densification and 12‐Year Changes in Cardiovascular Risk Markers4.313Citations (PDF)
41Neighborhood walkability and 12-year changes in cardio-metabolic risk: the mediating role of physical activity4.661Citations (PDF)
42Daily Walking among Commuters: A Cross-Sectional Study of Associations with Residential, Work, and Regional Accessibility in Melbourne, Australia (2012–2014)8.811Citations (PDF)
43Local Housing Characteristics Associated with Early Childhood Development Outcomes in Australian Disadvantaged Communities3.18Citations (PDF)
44Evidence-Informed Planning for Healthy Liveable Cities: How Can Policy Frameworks Be Used to Strengthen Research Translation?8.329Citations (PDF)
45The Urban Liveability Index: developing a policy-relevant urban liveability composite measure and evaluating associations with transport mode choice2.7135Citations (PDF)
46The impact of a park refurbishment in a low socioeconomic area on physical activity: a cost-effectiveness study4.618Citations (PDF)
47Using walkability measures to identify train stations with the potential to become transit oriented developments located in walkable neighbourhoods5.859Citations (PDF)
48Physical activity-related health and economic benefits of building walkable neighbourhoods: a modelled comparison between brownfield and greenfield developments4.637Citations (PDF)
49High Life Study protocol: a cross-sectional investigation of the influence of apartment building design policy on resident health and well-being
BMJ Open, 2019, 9, e029220
2.029Citations (PDF)
50Prospective trends in body mass index by main transport mode, 2007–20132.823Citations (PDF)
51Modest ratios of fast food outlets to supermarkets and green grocers are associated with higher body mass index: Longitudinal analysis of a sample of 15,229 Australians aged 45 years and older in the Australian National Liveability Study
Health and Place, 2018, 49, 101-110
3.837Citations (PDF)
52Health-Promoting Spatial Planning: Approaches for Strengthening Urban Policy Integration
Planning Theory and Practice, 2018, 19, 180-197
1.751Citations (PDF)
53Testing spatial measures of public open space planning standards with walking and physical activity health outcomes: Findings from the Australian national liveability study9.051Citations (PDF)
54Comparing private and public transport access to diabetic health services across inner, middle, and outer suburbs of Melbourne, Australia2.613Citations (PDF)
55Improving planning analysis and decision making: The development and application of a Walkability Planning Support System5.833Citations (PDF)
56Who Goes to Metropolitan Parks? A Latent Class Analysis Approach to Understanding Park Visitation
Leisure Sciences, 2018, 40, 343-355
2.821Citations (PDF)
57Are public open space attributes associated with walking and depression?
Cities, 2018, 74, 119-125
6.145Citations (PDF)
58A method for the inclusion of physical activity-related health benefits in cost-benefit analysis of built environment initiatives
Preventive Medicine, 2018, 106, 224-230
2.919Citations (PDF)
59A Longitudinal Study Examining Changes in Street Connectivity, Land Use, and Density of Dwellings and Walking for Transport in Brisbane, Australia8.862Citations (PDF)
60Local food environments: Australian stakeholder perspectives on urban planning and governance to advance health and equity within cities
Cities and Health, 2018, 2, 46-59
2.011Citations (PDF)
61An open-source tool to identify active travel from hip-worn accelerometer, GPS and GIS data4.622Citations (PDF)
62Local Food Environments, Suburban Development, and BMI: A Mixed Methods Study3.129Citations (PDF)
63The REVAMP natural experiment study: the impact of a play-scape installation on park visitation and park-based physical activity4.669Citations (PDF)
64Housing, neighbourhood and sociodemographic associations with adult levels of physical activity and adiposity: baseline findings from the ENABLE London study
BMJ Open, 2018, 8, e021257
2.09Citations (PDF)
65Identifying appropriate land-use mix measures for use in a national walkability index2.094Citations (PDF)
66Enhancing and expanding WSTLUR’s leadership and agenda: The urgent need for integrated interdisciplinary research, policy and practice2.01Citations (PDF)
67Nowhere to Go and Nothing to Do but Sit? Youth Screen Time and the Association With Access to Neighborhood Destinations
Environment and Behavior, 2017, 49, 84-108
3.825Citations (PDF)
68Creating and applying public transport indicators to test pathways of behaviours and health through an urban transport framework2.830Citations (PDF)
69Kids in Communities Study (KiCS) study protocol: a cross-sectional mixed-methods approach to measuring community-level factors influencing early child development in Australia
BMJ Open, 2017, 7, e014047
2.011Citations (PDF)
70Examining associations between area-level spatial measures of housing with selected health and wellbeing behaviours and outcomes in an urban context
Health and Place, 2017, 43, 17-24
3.839Citations (PDF)
71Neighbourhood socioeconomic and transport disadvantage: The potential to reduce social inequities in health through transport2.833Citations (PDF)
72Comparisons of depression, anxiety, well-being, and perceptions of the built environment amongst adults seeking social, intermediate and market-rent accommodation in the former London Olympic Athletes’ Village
Health and Place, 2017, 48, 31-39
3.89Citations (PDF)
73Supermarket access, transport mode and BMI: the potential for urban design and planning policy across socio-economic areas
Public Health Nutrition, 2017, 20, 3304-3315
2.235Citations (PDF)
74Examining associations between urban design attributes and transport mode choice for walking, cycling, public transport and private motor vehicle trips2.8142Citations (PDF)
75Challenges in conducting natural experiments in parks—lessons from the REVAMP study4.626Citations (PDF)
76Identifying destination distances that support walking trips in local neighborhoods2.879Citations (PDF)
77Identifying, creating, and testing urban planning measures for transport walking: Findings from the Australian national liveability study2.842Citations (PDF)
78Using spatial measures to test a conceptual model of social infrastructure that supports health and wellbeing
Cities and Health, 2017, 1, 194-209
2.0102Citations (PDF)
79Public Open Spaces and Leisure-Time Walking in Brazilian Adults3.154Citations (PDF)
80Designing healthy communities: creating evidence on metrics for built environment features associated with walkable neighbourhood activity centres4.653Citations (PDF)
81A Longitudinal Analysis of the Influence of the Neighborhood Environment on Recreational Walking within the Neighborhood: Results from RESIDE8.878Citations (PDF)
82Testing spatial measures of alcohol outlet density with self‐rated health in the <scp>A</scp>ustralian context: Implications for policy and practice
Drug and Alcohol Review, 2016, 35, 298-306
2.115Citations (PDF)
83Walkability and walking for transport: characterizing the built environment using space syntax4.685Citations (PDF)
84Neighbourhood disadvantage and self-reported type 2 diabetes, heart disease and comorbidity: a cross-sectional multilevel study
Annals of Epidemiology, 2016, 26, 146-150
1.832Citations (PDF)
85Health service access in urban growth areas: examining the evidence and applying a case study approach
Australian Planner, 2016, 53, 83-90
1.22Citations (PDF)
86Does heightened fear of crime lead to poorer mental health in new suburbs, or vice versa?
Social Science and Medicine, 2016, 168, 30-34
4.334Citations (PDF)
87City planning and population health: a global challenge
Lancet, The, 2016, 388, 2912-2924
52.81,095Citations (PDF)
88Land use, transport, and population health: estimating the health benefits of compact cities
Lancet, The, 2016, 388, 2925-2935
52.8494Citations (PDF)
89Use of science to guide city planning policy and practice: how to achieve healthy and sustainable future cities
Lancet, The, 2016, 388, 2936-2947
52.8327Citations (PDF)
90Cost-effectiveness of investing in sidewalks as a means of increasing physical activity: a RESIDE modelling study
BMJ Open, 2016, 6, e011617
2.019Citations (PDF)
91Cohort profile: Examining Neighbourhood Activities in Built Living Environments in London: the ENABLE London—Olympic Park cohort
BMJ Open, 2016, 6, e012643
2.011Citations (PDF)
92The Australian longitudinal study on male health-methods
BMC Public Health, 2016, 16,
3.348Citations (PDF)
93Safe RESIDential Environments? A longitudinal analysis of the influence of crime-related safety on walking4.670Citations (PDF)
94An analysis of local government health policy against state priorities and a social determinants framework1.715Citations (PDF)
95The effect of siblings and family dog ownership on children's independent mobility to neighbourhood destinations1.715Citations (PDF)
96Can neighborhood green space mitigate health inequalities? A study of socio-economic status and mental health
Health and Place, 2016, 38, 16-21
3.884Citations (PDF)
97Street network measures and adults' walking for transport: Application of space syntax
Health and Place, 2016, 38, 89-95
3.8107Citations (PDF)
98Cycling as a Part of Daily Life: A Review of Health Perspectives
Transport Reviews, 2016, 36, 45-71
10.1293Citations (PDF)
99An International Perspective on the Nexus of Physical Activity Research and Policy
Environment and Behavior, 2016, 48, 37-54
3.832Citations (PDF)
100Are liveable neighbourhoods safer neighbourhoods? Testing the rhetoric on new urbanism and safety from crime in Perth, Western Australia
Social Science and Medicine, 2016, 164, 150-157
4.338Citations (PDF)
101Best Practice Principles for Community Indicator Systems and a Case Study Analysis: How Community Indicators Victoria is Creating Impact and Bridging Policy, Practice and Research
Social Indicators Research, 2016, 131, 567-586
2.628Citations (PDF)
102Are Area-Level Measures of Employment Associated with Health Behaviours and Outcomes?
Social Indicators Research, 2016, 134, 237-251
2.69Citations (PDF)
103Could public policies reduce inequalities in physical activity and health?0.30Citations (PDF)
104Motivated to walk but nowhere to walk to: Differential effect of a mass media campaign by mix of local destinations
Preventive Medicine Reports, 2015, 2, 403-405
1.71Citations (PDF)
105Quality of Public Open Spaces and Recreational Walking
American Journal of Public Health, 2015, 105, 2490-2495
2.963Citations (PDF)
106Are we developing walkable suburbs through urban planning policy? Identifying the mix of design requirements to optimise walking outcomes from the ‘Liveable Neighbourhoods’ planning policy in Perth, Western Australia4.637Citations (PDF)
107Planning Healthy, Liveable and Sustainable Cities: How Can Indicators Inform Policy?
Urban Policy and Research, 2015, 33, 131-144
2.1154Citations (PDF)
108Suspicious minds: Can features of the local neighbourhood ease parents' fears about stranger danger?6.041Citations (PDF)
109The influence of the neighborhood physical environment on early child health and development: A review and call for research
Health and Place, 2015, 33, 25-36
3.8239Citations (PDF)
110Translating active living research into policy and practice: One important pathway to chronic disease prevention1.5140Citations (PDF)
111Area-Level Disparities of Public Open Space: A Geographic Information Systems Analysis in Metropolitan Melbourne
Urban Policy and Research, 2015, 33, 306-323
2.141Citations (PDF)
112Individual, Social, and Environmental Correlates of Healthy and Unhealthy Eating1.743Citations (PDF)
113Developing indicators of public open space to promote health and wellbeing in communities
Applied Geography, 2015, 57, 112-119
5.0137Citations (PDF)
114Associations between park features and adolescent park use for physical activity4.6103Citations (PDF)
115Public open space, physical activity, urban design and public health: Concepts, methods and research agenda
Health and Place, 2015, 33, 75-82
3.8369Citations (PDF)
116Associations between individual socioeconomic position, neighbourhood disadvantage and transport mode: baseline results from the HABITAT multilevel study3.168Citations (PDF)
117Neighborhood Correlates of Sitting Time for Australian Adults in New Suburbs
Environment and Behavior, 2015, 47, 902-922
3.811Citations (PDF)
118How active are people in metropolitan parks? An observational study of park visitation in Australia
BMC Public Health, 2015, 15,
3.3104Citations (PDF)
119Cycling for transport and recreation: Associations with the socio-economic, natural and built environment
Health and Place, 2015, 36, 152-161
3.877Citations (PDF)
120The building blocks of a ‘Liveable Neighbourhood’: Identifying the key performance indicators for walking of an operational planning policy in Perth, Western Australia
Health and Place, 2015, 36, 173-183
3.845Citations (PDF)
121The development of policy-relevant transport indicators to monitor health behaviours and outcomes2.823Citations (PDF)
122Conceptualising and Measuring Spatial Indicators of Employment Through a Liveability Lens
Social Indicators Research, 2015, 127, 565-576
2.614Citations (PDF)
123Does the walkability of neighbourhoods affect children's independent mobility, independent of parental, socio-cultural and individual factors?
Children's Geographies, 2014, 12, 393-411
2.185Citations (PDF)
124Developing a research and practice tool to measure walkability: a demonstration project1.666Citations (PDF)
125The cost-effectiveness of installing sidewalks to increase levels of transport-walking and health
Preventive Medicine, 2014, 67, 322-329
2.920Citations (PDF)
126Evaluating the Implementation and Active Living Impacts of a State Government Planning Policy Designed to Create Walkable Neighborhoods in Perth, Western Australia2.563Citations (PDF)
127Neighbourhood influences on mental health in master planned estates: a qualitative study of resident perspectives1.619Citations (PDF)
128Change in walking for transport: a longitudinal study of the influence of neighbourhood disadvantage and individual-level socioeconomic position in mid-aged adults4.638Citations (PDF)
129Sedentary behaviour and health: mapping environmental and social contexts to underpin chronic disease prevention11.2192Citations (PDF)
130Workplace Stress1.427Citations (PDF)
131Knuiman et al. Respond to "Time-Varying Neighborhood Environments"3.41Citations (PDF)
132Prevalence of overweight, obesity and underweight in Western Australian school-aged children; 2008 compared with 2003
Public Health Nutrition, 2014, 17, 2687-2691
2.210Citations (PDF)
133Patterns of social capital associated with transit oriented development5.891Citations (PDF)
134Do changes in residents' fear of crime impact their walking? Longitudinal results from RESIDE
Preventive Medicine, 2014, 62, 161-166
2.982Citations (PDF)
135Cycling for transport and recreation: Associations with socio-economic position, environmental perceptions, and psychological disposition
Preventive Medicine, 2014, 63, 29-35
2.983Citations (PDF)
136Urban design and health: progress to date and future challenges1.640Citations (PDF)
137Perceptions of the Built Environment and Associations With Walking Among Retirement Village Residents
Environment and Behavior, 2014, 46, 46-69
3.849Citations (PDF)
138Sense of Community and Its Association With the Neighborhood Built Environment
Environment and Behavior, 2014, 46, 677-697
3.8169Citations (PDF)
139A Longitudinal Analysis of the Influence of the Neighborhood Built Environment on Walking for Transportation: The RESIDE Study3.4171Citations (PDF)
140Does walkable neighbourhood design influence the association between objective crime and walking?4.649Citations (PDF)
141Do low-income neighbourhoods have the least green space? A cross-sectional study of Australia’s most populous cities
BMC Public Health, 2014, 14,
3.3306Citations (PDF)
142Dog walking is associated with more outdoor play and independent mobility for children
Preventive Medicine, 2014, 67, 259-263
2.946Citations (PDF)
143Does Fear of Crime Discourage Walkers? A Social-Ecological Exploration of Fear As a Deterrent to Walking
Environment and Behavior, 2014, 46, 698-717
3.890Citations (PDF)
144Public transport access and availability in the RESIDE study: Is it taking us where we want to go?2.846Citations (PDF)
145Urban liveability: Emerging lessons from Australia for exploring the potential for indicators to measure the social determinants of health
Social Science and Medicine, 2014, 111, 64-73
4.3264Citations (PDF)
146The impact of parents’ fear of strangers and perceptions of informal social control on children's independent mobility
Health and Place, 2014, 26, 60-68
3.8166Citations (PDF)
147The impact of neighborhood walkability on walking: Does it differ across adult life stage and does neighborhood buffer size matter?
Health and Place, 2014, 25, 43-46
3.8142Citations (PDF)
148School site walkability and active school transport – association, mediation and moderation5.863Citations (PDF)
149Examining correlates of self-reported and objectively measured physical activity among retirement village residents1.418Citations (PDF)
150Mismatch between Perceived and Objectively Measured Land Use Mix and Street Connectivity: Associations with Neighborhood Walking
Journal of Urban Health, 2014, 92, 242-252
3.290Citations (PDF)
151Neighbourhood Effects Influencing Early Childhood Development: Conceptual Model and Trial Measurement Methodologies from the Kids in Communities Study
Social Indicators Research, 2014, 120, 197-212
2.655Citations (PDF)
152Built environment impacts on walking for transport in Brisbane, Australia
Transportation, 2014, 43, 53-77
2.290Citations (PDF)
153Reconnecting urban planning with health: a protocol for the development and validation of national liveability indicators associated with noncommunicable disease risk behaviours and health outcomes2.229Citations (PDF)
154Results from Australia’s 2014 Report Card on Physical Activity for Children and Youth2.93Citations (PDF)
155The association between neighborhood greenness and weight status: an observational study in Perth Western Australia5.5102Citations (PDF)
156Initiating and maintaining recreational walking: A longitudinal study on the influence of neighborhood green space
Preventive Medicine, 2013, 57, 178-182
2.9122Citations (PDF)
157The influence of urban design on neighbourhood walking following residential relocation: Longitudinal results from the RESIDE study4.3286Citations (PDF)
158Suburban neighbourhood design: Associations with fear of crime versus perceived crime risk6.043Citations (PDF)
159Where Do Children Travel to and What Local Opportunities Are Available? The Relationship Between Neighborhood Destinations and Children’s Independent Mobility
Environment and Behavior, 2013, 45, 679-705
3.8104Citations (PDF)
160Neighborhood walkability and cardiometabolic risk factors in australian adults: an observational study
BMC Public Health, 2013, 13,
3.398Citations (PDF)
161People living in hilly residential areas in metropolitan Perth have less diabetes: spurious association or important environmental determinant?2.724Citations (PDF)
162Using simple agent-based modeling to inform and enhance neighborhood walkability2.746Citations (PDF)
163Socio-ecological predictors of the uptake of cycling for recreation and transport in adults: Results from the RESIDE study
Preventive Medicine, 2013, 57, 396-399
2.938Citations (PDF)
164(Re)Designing the built environment to support physical activity: Bringing public health back into urban design and planning
Cities, 2013, 35, 294-298
6.1120Citations (PDF)
165Who does well where? Exploring how self-rated health differs across diverse people and neighborhoods
Health and Place, 2013, 22, 82-89
3.820Citations (PDF)
166Can the built environment reduce health inequalities? A study of neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage and walking for transport
Health and Place, 2013, 19, 89-98
3.8145Citations (PDF)
167Measurement of children's physical activity using a pedometer with a built-in memory2.411Citations (PDF)
168Effects of access to public open spaces on walking: Is proximity enough?9.0115Citations (PDF)
169Development of a Public Open Space Desktop Auditing Tool (POSDAT): A remote sensing approach
Applied Geography, 2013, 38, 22-30
5.0120Citations (PDF)
170Planning safer suburbs: Do changes in the built environment influence residents' perceptions of crime risk?4.362Citations (PDF)
171The impact of the built environment on health across the life course: design of a cross-sectional data linkage study
BMJ Open, 2013, 3, e002482
2.053Citations (PDF)
172Effects of Find Thirty every day<sup>®</sup>1.721Citations (PDF)
173“Through the Kids . . . We Connected With Our Community”
Environment and Behavior, 2013, 45, 344-368
3.837Citations (PDF)
174Environmental Factors Associated With Active Living in Retirement Village Residents
Research on Aging, 2013, 35, 459-480
2.332Citations (PDF)
175A New Urban Planning Code’s Impact on Walking: The Residential Environments Project
American Journal of Public Health, 2013, 103, 1219-1228
2.958Citations (PDF)
176Keeping Brazilians Moving: the importance of urban and transport planning0.30Citations (PDF)
177Destination and Route Attributes Associated with Adults’ Walking0.8262Citations (PDF)
178Increasing Children’s Physical Activity1.7120Citations (PDF)
179Conducting field research in a primary school setting: Methodological considerations for maximizing response rates, data quality and quantity
Health Education Journal, 2012, 71, 590-596
1.05Citations (PDF)
180School and individual‐level characteristics are associated with children's moderate to vigorous‐intensity physical activity during school recess1.726Citations (PDF)
181The association between objectively measured neighbourhood features and walking for transport in mid-aged adults
Local Environment, 2012, 17, 131-146
2.721Citations (PDF)
182The association between neighborhood greenness and cardiovascular disease: an observational study
BMC Public Health, 2012, 12,
3.3209Citations (PDF)
183Access to commercial destinations within the neighbourhood and walking among Australian older adults4.672Citations (PDF)
184The association between sidewalk length and walking for different purposes in established neighborhoods4.646Citations (PDF)
185Creating sense of community: The role of public space6.0517Citations (PDF)
186Physical Activity Policies and Legislation in Schools3.340Citations (PDF)
187The relationship between cluster-analysis derived walkability and local recreational and transportation walking among Canadian adults
Health and Place, 2012, 18, 1079-1087
3.864Citations (PDF)
188Streets Apart: Does Social Capital Vary with Neighbourhood Design?
Urban Studies Research, 2012, 2012, 1-11
0.239Citations (PDF)
189Active living research: Partnerships that count
Health and Place, 2012, 18, 118-120
3.816Citations (PDF)
190How far do children travel from their homes? Exploring children's activity spaces in their neighborhood
Health and Place, 2012, 18, 263-273
3.8144Citations (PDF)
191Quality or quantity? Exploring the relationship between Public Open Space attributes and mental health in Perth, Western Australia
Social Science and Medicine, 2012, 74, 1570-1577
4.3338Citations (PDF)
192BMI-Referenced Cut-Points for Recommended Daily Pedometer-Determined Steps in Australian Children and Adolescents1.911Citations (PDF)
193The Built Environment and Depression in Later Life: The Health In Men Study1.889Citations (PDF)
194A cross-sectional study of the individual, social, and built environmental correlates of pedometer-based physical activity among elementary school children4.630Citations (PDF)
195Creating safe walkable streetscapes: Does house design and upkeep discourage incivilities in suburban neighbourhoods?6.069Citations (PDF)
196The influence of the built environment, social environment and health behaviors on body mass index. Results from RESIDE
Preventive Medicine, 2011, 53, 57-60
2.984Citations (PDF)
197How important is the land use mix measure in understanding walking behaviour? Results from the RESIDE study4.6212Citations (PDF)
198How many steps/day are enough? for adults4.6866Citations (PDF)
199School site and the potential to walk to school: The impact of street connectivity and traffic exposure in school neighborhoods
Health and Place, 2011, 17, 545-550
3.8263Citations (PDF)
200Seasonality in physical activity: Should this be a concern in all settings?
Health and Place, 2011, 17, 1084-1089
3.830Citations (PDF)
201Is the Neighbourhood Environment Associated with Sedentary Behaviour Outside of School Hours Among Children?2.777Citations (PDF)
202On your bike! a cross-sectional study of the individual, social and environmental correlates of cycling to school4.6116Citations (PDF)
203The Association between Objectively Measured Neighborhood Features and Walking in Middle-Aged Adults2.544Citations (PDF)
204Associations Between Recreational Walking and Attractiveness, Size, and Proximity of Neighborhood Open Spaces
American Journal of Public Health, 2010, 100, 1752-1757
2.9390Citations (PDF)
205“I'm Just a'-Walking the Dog” Correlates of Regular Dog Walking1.169Citations (PDF)
206The co-benefits for health of investing in active transportation0.5175Citations (PDF)
207Sense of community and its relationship with walking and neighborhood design
Social Science and Medicine, 2010, 70, 1381-1390
4.3388Citations (PDF)
208Love thy neighbour? Associations of social capital and crime with physical activity amongst women
Social Science and Medicine, 2010, 71, 807-814
4.3103Citations (PDF)
209Neighbourhood design and fear of crime: A social-ecological examination of the correlates of residents’ fear in new suburban housing developments
Health and Place, 2010, 16, 1156-1165
3.8199Citations (PDF)
210Sex- and age-specific seasonal variations in physical activity among adults3.180Citations (PDF)
211Neighbourhood physical activity environments and adiposity in children and mothers: a three-year longitudinal study4.642Citations (PDF)
212The ABC of Physical Activity for Health: A consensus statement from the British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences
Journal of Sports Sciences, 2010, 28, 573-591
1.8503Citations (PDF)
213Is practice aligned with the principles? Implementing New Urbanism in Perth, Western Australia
Transport Policy, 2010, 17, 287-294
5.639Citations (PDF)
214Neighborhood Disadvantage and Physical Activity: Baseline Results from the HABITAT Multilevel Longitudinal Study
Annals of Epidemiology, 2010, 20, 171-181
1.8124Citations (PDF)
215Environmental and Psychosocial Correlates of Accelerometer-Assessed and Self-Reported Physical Activity in Belgian Adults1.580Citations (PDF)
216Creating active environments across the life course: “thinking outside the square”11.238Citations (PDF)
217‘The Class is Always Cheaper on the Other Side’: Socioeconomic discrepancies in the cost of using recreational facilities2.18Citations (PDF)
218Physical activity for recreation or exercise on neighbourhood streets: Associations with perceived environmental attributes
Health and Place, 2009, 15, 1058-1063
3.895Citations (PDF)
219Walking and Cycling to School3.3171Citations (PDF)
220Encouraging Walking for Transport and Physical Activity in Children and Adolescents
Sports Medicine, 2009, 39, 995-1009
6.6185Citations (PDF)
221Neighbourhood fast food outlets and obesity in children and adults: the CLAN Study
Pediatric Obesity, 2008, 3, 249-256
3.885Citations (PDF)
222The anatomy of the safe and social suburb: An exploratory study of the built environment, social capital and residents’ perceptions of safety
Health and Place, 2008, 14, 15-31
3.8292Citations (PDF)
223Do features of public open spaces vary according to neighbourhood socio-economic status?
Health and Place, 2008, 14, 889-893
3.8297Citations (PDF)
224Is there a place for social capital in the psychology of health and place?6.089Citations (PDF)
225Does getting a dog increase recreational walking?4.693Citations (PDF)
226Tracking of pedometer-determined physical activity in adults who relocate: results from RESIDE4.658Citations (PDF)
227The relationship between destination proximity, destination mix and physical activity behaviors
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 46, 33-40
2.9305Citations (PDF)
228Evaluation of the implementation of a state government community design policy aimed at increasing local walking: Design issues and baseline results from RESIDE, Perth Western Australia
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 46, 46-54
2.9135Citations (PDF)
229Accessibility and connectivity in physical activity studies: The impact of missing pedestrian data
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 46, 41-45
2.9131Citations (PDF)
230Encouraging physical activity through dog walking: Why don't some owners walk with their dog?
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 46, 120-126
2.9103Citations (PDF)
231Achieving 10,000 steps: A comparison of public transport users and drivers in a University setting
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 47, 338-341
2.999Citations (PDF)
232The built environment, neighborhood crime and constrained physical activity: An exploration of inconsistent findings
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 47, 241-251
2.9502Citations (PDF)
233Features of public open spaces and physical activity among children: Findings from the CLAN study
Preventive Medicine, 2008, 47, 514-518
2.9149Citations (PDF)
234Understanding Dog Owners’ Increased Levels of Physical Activity: Results From RESIDE2.9146Citations (PDF)
235Barriers and motivators for owners walking their dog: results from qualitative research1.690Citations (PDF)
236Time Spent Outdoors at Midday and Children’s Body Mass Index2.916Citations (PDF)
237Can the impact on health of a government policy designed to create more liveable neighbourhoods be evaluated? An overview of the RESIDential Environment Project0.514Citations (PDF)
238Dog ownership, health and physical activity: A critical review of the literature
Health and Place, 2007, 13, 261-272
3.8291Citations (PDF)
239How Can Socio-Economic Differences in Physical Activity Among Women Be Explained? A Qualitative Study
Women and Health, 2006, 43, 93-113
1.4134Citations (PDF)
240Title is missing!4.639Citations (PDF)
241Title is missing!4.66Citations (PDF)
242Personal, Family, Social, and Environmental Correlates of Active Commuting to School3.3676Citations (PDF)
243The impact of the kidskin sun protection intervention on summer suntan and reported sun exposure: Was it sustained?
Preventive Medicine, 2006, 42, 14-20
2.927Citations (PDF)
244Development of a reliable measure of walking within and outside the local neighborhood: RESIDE's Neighborhood Physical Activity Questionnaire
Preventive Medicine, 2006, 42, 455-459
2.9205Citations (PDF)
245Active commuting in a university setting: Assessing commuting habits and potential for modal change
Transport Policy, 2006, 13, 240-253
5.6347Citations (PDF)
246Demographic and individual correlates of achieving 10,000 steps/day: use of pedometers in a population-based study1.651Citations (PDF)
247Neighborhood Environmental Factors Correlated with Walking Near Home0.8232Citations (PDF)
248People or places: What should be the target?2.4110Citations (PDF)
249Planning and implementing a community-based public health advocacy campaign: a transport case study from Australia2.114Citations (PDF)
250The pet connection: Pets as a conduit for social capital?
Social Science and Medicine, 2005, 61, 1159-1173
4.3368Citations (PDF)
251The Effect of a School-Based Sun Protection Intervention on the Development of Melanocytic Nevi in Children: 6-Year Follow-up1.237Citations (PDF)
252Understanding Physical Activity Environmental Correlates: Increased Specificity for Ecological Models3.8582Citations (PDF)
253Increasing walking3.31,341Citations (PDF)
254Opportunities and challenges for promoting health in a changing world1.61Citations (PDF)
255Creating SunSmart schools
Health Education Research, 2004, 19, 98-109
1.637Citations (PDF)
256Developing a framework for assessment of the environmental determinants of walking and cycling
Social Science and Medicine, 2003, 56, 1693-1703
4.3603Citations (PDF)
257The test‐retest reliability of habitual incidental physical activity1.715Citations (PDF)
258Filthy or fashionable? Young people's perceptions of smoking in the media
Health Education Research, 2003, 18, 554-567
1.645Citations (PDF)
259Environmental and Lifestyle Factors Associated with Overweight and Obesity in Perth, Australia2.5244Citations (PDF)
260Relative Influences of Individual, Social Environmental, and Physical Environmental Correlates of Walking2.9471Citations (PDF)
261Effect of a School-based Sun-Protection Intervention on the Development of Melanocytic Nevi in Children3.442Citations (PDF)
262Socioeconomic Status Differences in Recreational Physical Activity Levels and Real and Perceived Access to a Supportive Physical Environment
Preventive Medicine, 2002, 35, 601-611
2.9706Citations (PDF)
263Developing a reliable audit instrument to measure the physical environment for physical activity3.3425Citations (PDF)
264Play Hard Drink Safe: a pilot project to promote responsible alcohol consumption in sporting clubs in Western Australia1.63Citations (PDF)
265Promoting participation in physical activity in a community intervention study1.62Citations (PDF)
266The relative influence of individual, social and physical environment determinants of physical activity
Social Science and Medicine, 2002, 54, 1793-1812
4.31,006Citations (PDF)
267Methods: Measuring physical activity in public open space — an electronic device versus direct observation1.710Citations (PDF)
268Title is missing!
Cancer Causes and Control, 2001, 12, 387-393
1.830Citations (PDF)
269Methodological considerations when conducting direct observation in an outdoor environment: our experience in local parks1.77Citations (PDF)
270Developing National Physical Activity Guidelines for Australians1.729Citations (PDF)
271Increasing mouthguards usage among junior rugby and basketball players1.717Citations (PDF)
272Creating Smoke-Free Environments in Recreational Settings1.740Citations (PDF)
273Increasing the Reach of Health Sponsorship: Using a “Sponsorship Kit” to Promote Health2.53Citations (PDF)
274Improved sun protection behaviour in children after two years of the Kidskin intervention1.738Citations (PDF)
275Title is missing!
1998
0Citations (PDF)
276Cohort Profile:<i>Ten to Men</i>(the Australian Longitudinal Study on Male Health)5.135Citations (PDF)