•  26
    Detecting deterioration in patients with chronic disease using telemonitoring: navigating the 'trough of disillusionment'
    with Glyn Elwyn, Alex R. Hardisty, Carl May, Robert Evans, Douglas K. R. Robinson, Charlotte E. Bolton, Zaheer Yousef, Edward C. Conley, Omer F. Rana, W. Alex Gray, and Alun D. Preece
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (4): 896-903. 2012.
  •  16
    Insufficient evidence of benefit: a systematic review of home telemonitoring for COPD
    with Charlotte E. Bolton, Cerith S. Waters, and Glyn Elwyn
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (6): 1216-1222. 2011.
  •  14
    Death, Revelry, and "Thysia"
    Classical Antiquity 12 (2): 219-266. 1993.
    Much recent scholarship on "thysia" sees the meaning and function of the rite for the ancient Greeks to stem partly or largely from the beliefs and emotions surrounding the slaughter of the victim. Scholars have proposed that the Greeks experienced fear and awe when they killed animals for food, and that the source of these feelings was a perception of the slaughter of liverstock as akin to murder. This paper considers evidence for the ancient Greek experience of the rite of "thysia", with the u…Read more
  •  9
    Visual Language and Concepts of Cult on the "Lenaia Vases"
    Classical Antiquity 17 (1): 59-95. 1998.
    "Lenaia vases" is the traditional title given to a group of some seventy fifth-century Attic vases, black- and red-figure. These vases have in common that they show a cult-image of Dionysos, consisting of a mask or masks on a column, in combination with the conventional Attic imagery of the revelling ecstatic female worshippers usually called "maenads." The vases are important and their meaning much debated because they seem to hold out the promise of providing otherwise unavailable information …Read more