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Institution

Bowling Green State University

EducationBowling Green, Ohio, United States
About: Bowling Green State University is a education organization based out in Bowling Green, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 8315 authors who have published 16042 publications receiving 482564 citations. The organization is also known as: BGSU.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors conclude that the rise in cohabitation has offset changes in the levels and timing of marriage and that the age at first marriage according to education is near-convergence.
Abstract: The landscape of union formation has been shifting; Americans are now marrying at the highest ages on record and the majority of young adults have cohabited. Yet little attention has been paid to the timing of cohabitation relative to marriage. Using the National Survey of Families and Households and 4 cycles of the National Survey of Family Growth, the authors examined the timing of marriage, cohabitation, and unions over 20 years. As the median age at first marriage has climbed, the age at cohabitation has remained stable for men and women. The changes in the timing of union formation have been similar according to race/ethnicity. The marked delay in marriage among women and men with low educational attainment has resulted in a near-convergence in the age at first marriage according to education. The authors conclude that the rise in cohabitation has offset changes in the levels and timing of marriage.

165 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The authors reviewed some of the foundational assumptions on which the theory of religion and coping rests and summarized recent advances in research in the area of religious and coping, and highlighted some new directions for research in psychology of religion.
Abstract: Recently, the field of psychology has begun to display a growing interest in religious coping methods and their implications for health and well-being. Empirical studies have yielded an interesting picture of the relationship between religious coping and physical and mental health. In this paper, we review some of the foundational assumptions on which the theory of religion and coping rests. Then, we summarize recent advances in research in the area of religion and coping. We conclude by highlighting some of the exciting new directions for research in the psychology of religion and coping.

165 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For crayfish, differences in the turbulent structure of flow may actually increase orientation efficiency by decreasing search time, and on a broader scale, these results show that it is important to quantify orientation behaviour in a number of hydrodynamically different environments.

165 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings indicate that no individual was especially vulnerable or resistant to the performance impairing effects of sleep deprivation, and inter‐ and intra‐individual variability in performance during sleep deprivation was task dependent.
Abstract: The study purpose was to assess inter- and intra-individual variability in neurobehavioral function near the circadian nadir during sleep deprivation and conduct exploratory factor analyses to assess relationships among alertness and performance measures during sleep deprivation. Twenty-five healthy individuals (16 females) aged 18-25 years participated. Participants were sleep deprived for two nights under controlled laboratory conditions using a modified constant routine procedure. A comprehensive battery of neurobehavioral performance tests, subjective sleepiness (SSS), and objective alertness (MWT) were assessed. Seventeen of the 22 neurobehavioral measures were impaired by sleep deprivation (all P < 0.01). The use of multiple neurobehavioral performance measures revealed impairments for all individuals during sleep deprivation. However, sleep deprivation effects were task dependent within and between individuals. Gender contributed minimally to inter-individual variability in performance. Exploratory factor analysis reduced the 22 measures to seven independent factors. Our findings indicate that no individual was especially vulnerable or resistant to the performance impairing effects of sleep deprivation. Instead, inter- and intra-individual variability in performance during sleep deprivation was task dependent. The finding that subjective sleepiness and objective alertness were not related to any performance measure during sleep deprivation suggests that these measures may assess independent brain functions.

165 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The field would benefit from hypothesis-driven outcomes research based on a priori specification of the spiritual dimensions under investigation and their longitudinal relationship with key palliative outcomes, the use of validated measures of predictors and outcomes, and rigorous assessment of potential confounding variables.

165 citations


Authors

Showing all 8365 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eduardo Salas12971162259
Russell A. Barkley11935560109
Hong Liu100190557561
Jaak Panksepp9944640748
Kenneth I. Pargament9637241752
Robert C. Green9152640414
Robert W. Motl8571227961
Evert Jan Baerends8531852440
Hugh Garavan8441928773
Janet Shibley Hyde8322738440
Michael L. Gross8270127140
Jerry Silver7820125837
Michael E. Robinson7436619990
Abraham Clearfield7451319006
Kirk S. Schanze7351219118
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202321
202274
2021485
2020511
2019497