scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Bar-Ilan University

EducationRamat Gan, Israel
About: Bar-Ilan University is a education organization based out in Ramat Gan, Israel. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 12835 authors who have published 34964 publications receiving 995648 citations. The organization is also known as: Bar Ilan University & BIU.


Papers
More filters
Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of four approaches to multidimensional poverty analysis based respectively on the theory of fuzzy sets, information theory, efficiency analysis and axiomatic derivations of poverty indices is made.
Abstract: This paper makes a systematic comparison of four approaches to multidimensional poverty analysis based respectively on the theory of fuzzy sets, information theory, efficiency analysis and axiomatic derivations of poverty indices. The database was the 1995 Israeli Census that provided information on the ownership of various durable goods. There appears to be a fair degree of agreement between the various multidimensional poverty indices concerning the identification of the poor households. The four approaches have also shown that poverty decreases with the schooling level of the head of the household, first decreases and then increases with his/her age and with the size of the household. Poverty is higher when the head of the household is single and lower when he/she is married, lowest when the head of the household is Jewish and highest when he/she is Muslim. Poverty is also higher among households whose head immigrated in recent years, does not work or lives in Jerusalem. These observations were made on the basis of logit regressions. This impact on poverty of many of the variables is not very different from the one that is observed when poverty measurement is based only on the income or the total expenditures of the households.

273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the effects of task experience acquired directly and experience acquired vicariously from others on team creativity in a product-development task and find that direct task experience leads to higher levels of team creativity and more divergent products than indirect task experience.

273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Ruth Feldman1
TL;DR: Sleep-wake cyclicity, vagal tone, newborn orientation, and arousal modulation were each uniquely predictive of mother-infant synchrony, which appears to lay the foundation for the infant's capacity to partake in a temporally matched social dialogue.
Abstract: Links between neonatal biological rhythms and the emergence of interaction rhythms were examined in 3 groups (N = 71): high-risk preterms (HR; birth weight <1,000 g), low-risk preterms (LR; birth weight =1,700-1,850 g), and full-term (FT) infants. Once a week for premature infants and on the 2nd day for FT infants, sleep-wake cyclicity was extracted from 4-hr observations and cardiac vagal tone was measured. At term age, infant orientation was tested with the Neonatal Behavior Assessment Scale. At 3 months, arousal modulation and emotion regulation were assessed, and mother-infant synchrony was computed from microanalysis of face-to-face interactions using time-series analysis. Sleep-wake amplitudes showed a developmental leap at 31 weeks gestation, followed by a shift in vagal tone at 34 weeks gestation. At term, differences among FT, LR, and HR infants were observed for biological rhythms in a linear-decline pattern. Sleep-wake cyclicity, vagal tone, newborn orientation, and arousal modulation were each uniquely predictive of mother-infant synchrony. The organization of physiological oscillators appears to lay the foundation for the infant's capacity to partake in a temporally matched social dialogue.

273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that, for an intentional attack, little knowledge of the well-connected sites is sufficient to strongly reduce p(c), and at criticality, the topology of the network depends on the removal strategy, implying that different strategies may lead to different kinds of percolation transitions.
Abstract: We study tolerance and topology of random scale-free networks under attack and defense strategies that depend on the degree $k$ of the nodes This situation occurs, for example, when the robustness of a node depends on its degree or in an intentional attack with insufficient knowledge of the network We determine, for all strategies, the critical fraction ${p}_{c}$ of nodes that must be removed for disintegrating the network We find that, for an intentional attack, little knowledge of the well-connected sites is sufficient to strongly reduce ${p}_{c}$ At criticality, the topology of the network depends on the removal strategy, implying that different strategies may lead to different kinds of percolation transitions

272 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Better progress in expressive language was associated with the child's social abilities, while more significant progress in play skills was related to pre-intervention cognitive level.

271 citations


Authors

Showing all 13037 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
H. Eugene Stanley1541190122321
Albert-László Barabási152438200119
Shlomo Havlin131101383347
Stuart A. Aaronson12965769633
Britton Chance128111276591
Mark A. Ratner12796868132
Doron Aurbach12679769313
Jun Yu121117481186
Richard J. Wurtman11493353290
Amir Lerman11187751969
Zhu Han109140748725
Moussa B.H. Youdim10757442538
Juan Bisquert10745046267
Rachel Yehuda10646136726
Michael F. Green10648545707
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Maryland, College Park
155.9K papers, 7.2M citations

93% related

Rutgers University
159.4K papers, 6.7M citations

93% related

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
225.1K papers, 10.1M citations

93% related

Boston University
119.6K papers, 6.2M citations

92% related

Pennsylvania State University
196.8K papers, 8.3M citations

92% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023117
2022330
20212,287
20202,157
20191,920
20181,769