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David C. Wilson
Researcher at United States Geological Survey
Publications - 195
Citations - 5396
David C. Wilson is an academic researcher from United States Geological Survey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lithosphere & Crust. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 186 publications receiving 4658 citations. Previous affiliations of David C. Wilson include Georgia Institute of Technology & University of Chicago.
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Engaging the aging workforce: the relationship between perceived age similarity, satisfaction with coworkers, and employee engagement
TL;DR: Results indicated that satisfaction with one's coworkers related significantly to engagement, and perceived age similarity was associated with higher levels of engagement among older workers when they were highly satisfied with their coworker age composition.
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What are the odds? How demographic similarity affects the prevalence of perceived employment discrimination.
TL;DR: Results from a national survey of 763 full-time, United States employees show perceived sex-based discrimination at work was more prevalent among female than male employees, and perceived race-based Discrimination at Work was more prevalence among Black and Hispanic than White employees.
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Lithospheric structure of the Arabian and Eurasian collision zone in eastern Turkey from S-wave receiver functions
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used teleseismic S-to-P converted phases to identify the signature of the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) for the Eastern Anatolian Accretionary Complex.
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Unequal attendance: the relationships between race, organizational diversity cues, and absenteeism
TL;DR: This article examined the roles of two diversity cues related to workplace support (perceived organizational value of diversity and supervisor racial/ethnic similarity) in explicating this demographic difference among 659 Black, White, and Hispanic employees of U.S. companies.
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Increasing incidence of both juvenile-onset Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis in Scotland.
TL;DR: The incidence of juvenile-onset Crohn's disease continues to rise in Scotland and the prevalence has increased by 30% since 1983, and unlike the previous report from Scotland, the incidence of Juveniles'onset ulcerative colitis also is apparently rising.