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James L. Tramill

Researcher at Wichita State University

Publications -  23
Citations -  243

James L. Tramill is an academic researcher from Wichita State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Special education & Jenkins activity survey. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 23 publications receiving 241 citations. Previous affiliations of James L. Tramill include University of Southern Mississippi & Austin Peay State University.

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The interrelationships of ego strength, self-esteem, death anxiety, and gender in undergraduate college students.

TL;DR: It is shown that males showed significantly higher self-esteem and ego strength scores, and significantly lower death anxiety scores than did females.
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Contexts, Funding History, and Implications for Evaluating the Office of Special Education Program’s Investment in Personnel Preparation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore contexts that have shaped the federal program for personnel preparation in special education and provide a brief review of the historical, political, and policy considerations that influenced the directions, implementation, and impacts of the federal personnel preparation program funding at particular points in time.
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Alcoholic hypoglycemia as a result of acute challenges of ethanol

TL;DR: Alcohol-induced hypoglycemia was experimentally studied in male albino rats in subjects that had fasted 48 and 72 h and was not found in nonfasted animals.
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Defensive burying: A cross-species replication and extension

TL;DR: Five experiments investigating the display of defensive burying by Mongolian gerbil and mice are reported, finding that gerbils failed to engage in defensive burying when the aversive stimulus consisted of a flashbulb, an electric shock, and a chemical substance.
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A proposed relationship between the unidimensional short form of the TMAS and the DAS: The effects of embedding vs. separate administration

TL;DR: The relationship between the death anxiety scale (DAS) and the unidimensional short form of the Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale (TMAS) was studied in this paper, and the effects of administering a combined, or embedded, version of these two instruments were evaluated.