scispace - formally typeset
A

Anthony R. Harris

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  38
Citations -  2484

Anthony R. Harris is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tricine & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 36 publications receiving 2357 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony R. Harris include DuPont & Oakland University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The P600 as an index of syntactic integration difficulty

TL;DR: The authors show that the P600 component in Event Related Potential research has been associated with syntactic reanalysis processes, and that the effect of difficult syntactic integration in grammatical sentences is not restricted to reanalysis, but reflects difficulty with syntactical integration processes in general.
Journal ArticleDOI

The DNA sequence of human chromosome 7

LaDeana W. Hillier, +109 more
- 10 Jul 2003 - 
TL;DR: The euchromatic sequence of chromosome 7, the first metacentric chromosome completed so far, has excellent concordance with previously established physical and genetic maps, and it exhibits an unusual amount of segmentally duplicated sequence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex and Theories of Deviance: Toward a Functional Theory of Deviant Type-Scripts

TL;DR: The functional theory of deviant type-scripts as discussed by the authors suggests that everyday expectancies for deviance, which link types of actors to types of roles and which serve dominant social interests, at once account for professional failure to include the sex variable in theories of criminal deviance and provide the single strongest theoretical account of the very striking cross-cultural difference in male and female criminality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Murder and Medicine: The Lethality of Criminal Assault 1960-1999

TL;DR: Despite the proliferation of increasingly dangerous weapons and the very large increase in rates of serious criminal assault, since 1960, the lethality of such assault in the United States has drop as discussed by the authors.

Murder and Medicine

TL;DR: It is argued that research into the causes and deterability of homicide would benefit from a “lethality perspective” that focuses on serious assaults, only a small proportion of which end in death.