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We present a detailed study of emission-line systems in the GAMA G23 region, making use of $textit{WISE}$ photometry that includes carefully measured resolved sources. After applying several cuts to the initial catalogue of $sim$41,000 galaxies, we extract a sample of 9,809 galaxies. We then compare the spectral diagnostic (BPT) classification of 1154 emission-line galaxies (38$%$ resolved in W1) to their location in the $textit{WISE}$ colour-colour diagram, leading to the creation of a new zone for mid-infrared warm galaxies located 2$sigma$ above the star-forming sequence, below the standard $textit{WISE}$ AGN region. We find that the BPT and $textit{WISE}$ diagrams agree on the classification for 85$%$ and 8$%$ of the galaxies as non-AGN (star forming = SF) and AGN, respectively, and disagree on $sim$7$%$ of the entire classified sample. 39$%$ of the AGN (all types) are broad-line systems for which the [ion{N}{ii}] and [H$alpha$] fluxes can barely be disentangled, giving in most cases spurious [ion{N}{ii}]/[H$alpha$] flux ratios. However, several optical AGN appear to be completely consistent with SF in $textit{WISE}$. We argue that these could be low power AGN, or systems whose hosts dominate the IR emission. Alternatively, given the sometimes high [ion{O}{iii}] luminosity in these galaxies, the emission lines may be generated by shocks coming from super-winds associated with SF rather than the AGN activity. Based on our findings, we have created a new diagnostic: [W1-W2] vs [ion{N}{ii}]/[H$alpha$], which has the virtue of separating SF from AGN and high-excitation sources. It classifies 3$sim$5 times more galaxies than the classic BPT
Recent work has suggested that mid-IR wavelengths are optimal for estimating the mass-to-light ratios of stellar populations and hence the stellar masses of galaxies. We compare stellar masses deduced from spectral energy distribution (SED) models, f
Combining high-fidelity group characterisation from the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey and source-tailored $z<0.1$ photometry from the WISE survey, we present a comprehensive study of the properties of ungrouped galaxies, compared to 497 gala
The Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey furnishes a deep redshift catalog that, when combined with the Wide-field Infrared Explorer ($WISE$), allows us to explore for the first time the mid-infrared properties of $> 110, 000$ galaxies over 120 deg
We explore the clustering of galaxy groups in the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey to investigate the dependence of group bias and profile on separation scale and group mass. Due to the inherent uncertainty in estimating the group selection fun
The Galaxy And Mass Assembly Survey (GAMA) covers five fields with highly complete spectroscopic coverage ($>95$ per cent) to intermediate depths ($r<19.8$ or $i < 19.0$ mag), and collectively spans 250 square degrees of Equatorial or Southern sky. F