1. Lipsman N, Lozano AM. (2011). The most cited works in major depression: the 'Citation classics'. Journal of Affective Disorders 134(1-3):39-44.
2. Ring N, Pinnock H, Wilson C, Hoskins G, et al. (2011). Understanding what asthma plans mean: a linguistic analysis of terminology used in published texts. Primary Care Respiratory Journal 20(2):170-7; 4 p following 177.
3. Lipsman N, Lozano AM. (2011). The most cited works in major depression: the 'Citation classics'. Journal of Affective Disorders 134(1-3):39-44.
4. McNamara BJ, Sanson-Fisher R, D'Este C, Eades S. (2011). Type 2 diabetes in Indigenous populations: quality of intervention research over 20 years. Preventive Medicine 52(1):3-9.
5. Sivan M, Smith M, Bavikatte G, Bradley L. (2010). The academic value of rehabilitation medicine meetings. Disability and Rehabilitation 32(23):1894-6.
6. Laerum E, Hoye S, Nordland R, Hegstad V, et al. (2010). [What do Norwegian media communicate about back pain?]. Tidsskrift for Den Norske Laegeforening 130(24):2465-8.
7. Glynn RW, Chin JZ, Kerin MJ, Sweeney KJ. (2010). Representation of cancer in the medical literature--a bibliometric analysis. PLoS ONE (Electronic Resource) 5(11):e13902.
8. Negrini S, Fusco C, Ilieva E, Moslavac S, et al. (2010). National journals of physical rehabilitation medicine in Europe: a survey. European Journal of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine 46(2):283-90.
9. Theander SS, Wetterberg L. (2010). Schizophrenia in Medline 1950-2006: a bibliometric investigation. Schizophrenia Research 118(1-3):279-84.
10. Dorahy MJ, Lewis CA. (2006). Absence of dissociative disorders in Irish journals. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 23(1):38-39.