L
Lei Wang
Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publications - 489
Citations - 13565
Lei Wang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Engineering. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 429 publications receiving 9543 citations. Previous affiliations of Lei Wang include Taizhou University & Peking University.
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The validity and structure of culture-level personality scores: Data from ratings of young adolescents
Robert R. McCrae,Antonio Terracciano,Filip De Fruyt,Marleen De Bolle,Michele J. Gelfand,Paul T. Costa,Maria E. Aguilar-Vafaie,Chang-Kyu Ahn,Hyun-Nie Ahn,Lidia Alcalay,Jüri Allik,Tatyana V. Avdeyeva,Marek Blatny,Denis Bratko,Marina Brunner-Sciarra,Thomas R. Cain,Niyada Chittcharat,Jarret T. Crawford,Margarida P. de Lima,Ryan Fehr,Emília Ficková,Sami Gülgöz,Martina Hrebickova,Lee Jussim,Waldemar Klinkosz,Goran Knezevic,Nora Leibovich de Figueroa,Corinna E. Löckenhoff,Thomas G. Martin,Iris Marušić,Khairul Anwar Mastor,Katsharu Nakazato,Florence Nansubuga,Jose Porrata,Danka Purić,Anu Realo,Norma Reátegui,Jean-Pierre Rolland,Vanina Schmidt,Andrzej Sekowski,Jane Shakespeare-Finch,Yoshiko Shimonaka,Franco Simonetti,Jerzy Siuta,Barbara Szmigielska,Vitanya Vanno,Lei Wang,Michelle Yik +47 more
TL;DR: This article examined properties of culture-level personality traits in ratings of targets (N=5,109) ages 12 to 17 in 24 cultures and found that these traits were generalizable across gender, age, and relationship groups.
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Determination of soil temperature in an arid region
TL;DR: A recent approach focusing on a high temporal resolution soil temperature data read from literature is tested, and the resulting soil temperature is found to be in satisfactory agreement with direct measurements.
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Evaluation of FAMIL2 in Simulating the Climatology and Seasonal-to-Interannual Variability of Tropical Cyclone Characteristics
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Sensitivity of LS neurons to optic flow stimuli
TL;DR: LS (lateral suprasylvian area) is an important area in the extrastriate visual cortex of the cat and is thought to be analogous in function to the middle temporal area of macaque mon-
The inaccuracy of national character stereotypes
Robert R. McCrae,Wayne Chan,Lee Jussim,Filip De Fruyt,Corinna E. Löckenhoff,Marleen De Bolle,Paul T. Costa,Martina Hřebíčková,Sylvie Graf,Anu Realo,Jüri Allik,Jüri Allik,Katsuharu Nakazato,Yoshiko Shimonaka,Michelle Yik,Emília Ficková,Marina Brunner-Sciarra,Norma Reátigui,Nora Leibovich de Figueora,Vanina Schmidt,Chang kyu Ahn,Hyun nie Ahn,Maria E. Aguilar-Vafaie,Jerzy Siuta,Barbara Szmigielska,Thomas R. Cain,Jarret T. Crawford,Khairul Anwar Mastor,Jean Pierre Rolland,Florence Nansubuga,Daniel R. Miramontez,Verónica Benet-Martínez,Jérôme Rossier,Denis Bratko,Iris Marušić,Jamin Halberstadt,Mami Yamaguchi,Goran Knežević,Danka Purić,Thomas A. Martin,Mirona Gheorghiu,Peter B. Smith,Claudio Barbaranelli,Lei Wang,Jane Shakespeare-Finch,Margarida Lima,Waldemar Klinkosz,Andrzej Sekowski,Lidia Alcalay,Franco Simonetti,Tatyana V. Avdeyeva,V. S. Pramila,Antonio Terracciano,Antonio Terracciano +53 more
TL;DR: This article provided arguments for the validity of assessed national mean trait levels as criteria for evaluating stereotype accuracy and reported new data on national character in 26 cultures from descriptions (N= 3323) of the typical male or female adolescent, adult, or old person in each.