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Michael J. Maher

Researcher at University of New South Wales

Publications -  157
Citations -  7302

Michael J. Maher is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Defeasible logic & Logic programming. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 154 publications receiving 7180 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael J. Maher include Australian Defence Force Academy & University of Texas at Austin.

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Beliefs versus Lived Experience: Gender Differences in Catholic College Students' Attitudes Concerning Premarital Sex and Contraception

TL;DR: The authors conducted a survey of undergraduate students living in residence halls at Loyola University Chicago and found that the majority of both Catholic males and Catholic females disagreed with the statements, “Having sex before being married is wrong,” and “Using artificial birth control (the pill, condoms, etc.) is wrong.”
Proceedings ArticleDOI

An architecture and prototype implementation of a system for individualised workflows in medical information systems

TL;DR: A project that tried to design and implement a highly flexible workflow management system in the area of patient care delivery developed a formal model for the specification of medical directives, designed and implemented a coordination system with multi-user capabilities, and developed graphical user agents for the most important classes of users of the system.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Priest Sex Scandal and Its Effects on Trust and Respect -- How Catholic College Students Think About Catholic Leadership

TL;DR: The authors conducted a survey of undergraduates living in residence halls at Loyola University Chicago, a Jesuit Catholic university, and found little difference between Catholics and non-Catholics in their responses to the item on trust and respect of leadership.

Is the Roman Catholic prohibition of female priests sexist? How Catholic college students think about women's ordination and sexism

TL;DR: This paper conducted a survey of undergraduate students living in residence halls at Loyola University Chicago and found that the correlation of the responses by Catholics between these two statements was insignificant (r = -.089).