Institution
Bar-Ilan University
Education•Ramat 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 published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relation between feelings of job insecurity and various attitudes and opinions of employees towards their work and the organization and showed that JI is associated with more negative evaluations of all aspects of the company and the job, including more objective variables such as the quality of products and services.
Abstract: Examines the relations between feelings of job insecurity (JI) and various attitudes and opinions of employees towards their work and the organization. Analyses survey data from 11 European high‐tech organizations with a total of 8,483 respondents. Shows that JI is associated with more negative evaluations of all aspects of the company and the job, including more objective variables such as the quality of products and services. Particularly high correlations are observed between JI and negative judgements on management and the company in general. Further presents the development of a questionnaire to assess JI. The questionnaire is then used to study differential effects of JI on persons with internal and external locus of control, and with high and low social support.
266 citations
••
TL;DR: Ribavirin exerts a significant, moderate, and transient antiviral effect in a significant proportion of patients with chronic hepatitis C and is partly responsible for the improved efficacy of the combination of standard IFN-alpha and ribavirin compared with IFn-alpha monotherapy by increasing the incidence of the initial response.
266 citations
••
TL;DR: Results are inconsistent with Selye's doctrine of nonspecificity and the existence of a unitary "stress syndrome", but are more consistent with the concept that each stressor has its own central neurochemical and peripheral neuroendocrine "signature."
Abstract: Selye defined stress as the nonspecific response of the body to any demand. Stressors elicit both pituitary-adrenocortical and sympathoadrenomedullary responses. One can test Selye’s concept by com...
265 citations
••
265 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize SnO in sonochemically in mildly basic SnCl2 solutions and then transform it to a nanocrystalline phase by heating to 200 °C. Composite electrodes comprised of 80% SnO, 10% graphite flakes and 10% polymeric binder were tested as anodes for rechargeable Li batteries.
Abstract: Nanoparticles of SnO were synthesized sonochemically in mildly basic SnCl2 solutions. The amorphous product thus obtained could be transformed to a nanocrystalline phase by heating to 200 °C. Composite electrodes comprised (by weight) of 80% SnO, 10% graphite flakes (conductive additive), and 10% polymeric binder (an optimal composition) were tested as anodes for rechargeable Li batteries. The nanocrystalline SnO was found to be much more effective as an active material for electrodes than the initial amorphous phase. These electrodes could reach nearly their theoretical capacity (≃790 mAh/g, SnO) in electrochemical lithiation−delithiation processes versus a Li counter electrode in nonaqueous Li salt solutions. However, there is still a long way to go to the possible use of SnO as an anode material in practical batteries. This is due to its high irreversible capacity (Li2O formation and surface film precipitation due to reactions of lithium−tin compounds with solution species) and gradual capacity decreas...
265 citations
Authors
Showing all 13037 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
H. Eugene Stanley | 154 | 1190 | 122321 |
Albert-László Barabási | 152 | 438 | 200119 |
Shlomo Havlin | 131 | 1013 | 83347 |
Stuart A. Aaronson | 129 | 657 | 69633 |
Britton Chance | 128 | 1112 | 76591 |
Mark A. Ratner | 127 | 968 | 68132 |
Doron Aurbach | 126 | 797 | 69313 |
Jun Yu | 121 | 1174 | 81186 |
Richard J. Wurtman | 114 | 933 | 53290 |
Amir Lerman | 111 | 877 | 51969 |
Zhu Han | 109 | 1407 | 48725 |
Moussa B.H. Youdim | 107 | 574 | 42538 |
Juan Bisquert | 107 | 450 | 46267 |
Rachel Yehuda | 106 | 461 | 36726 |
Michael F. Green | 106 | 485 | 45707 |