Institution
Bowling Green State University
Education•Bowling 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 published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This article revisited the question of voter turnout in American presidential elections from the perspective of political generations by examining the entire period between 1952 and 1966 by further specifying the turnout model and, most important, by incorporating a generational component.
Abstract: This article revisits the question of voter turnout in American presidential elections from the perspective of political generations. We extend previous analyses by examining the entire period between 1952 and 1966 by further specifying the turnout model and, most important, by incorporating a generational component. We hypothesize that the direct effect of membership in the cohort born prior to 1932 is to increase voter turnout and the indirect effect of membership in this cohort is to increase the impact of party-related variables in accounting for turnout. Finally, we hypothesize that the indirect effect of membership in the cohort born after 1932 is to increase the impact of socio-economic, media-related, and candidate-related variables. Our findings strongly suggest that generational effects account for a significant component of the decrease in turnout among American citizens. The impact of generations is most pronounced in the first half of the voting life cycle.
144 citations
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TL;DR: The 9-anthryltriphenylstibonium cation, [1](+), has been synthesized and used as a sensor for the toxic fluoride anion in water and can be used in plain tap water or bottled water to test fluoridation levels.
Abstract: The 9-anthryltriphenylstibonium cation, [1](+), has been synthesized and used as a sensor for the toxic fluoride anion in water. This stibonium cation complexes fluoride ions to afford the corresponding fluorostiborane 1-F. This reaction, which occurs at fluoride concentrations in the parts per million range, is accompanied by a drastic fluorescence turn-on response. It is also highly selective and can be used in plain tap water or bottled water to test fluoridation levels.
144 citations
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TL;DR: This paper examines the process of system review during the postimplementation stage of an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, or postim implementation review (PIR), and identifies factors that contribute to high-quality PIRs.
144 citations
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TL;DR: A new homoleptic Cu(I) photosensitizer designed to exhibit cooperative steric hindrance, unexpectedly produced strong photoluminescence and long excited state lifetimes in a broad range of coordinating and noncoordinating solvents, along with impressive thermodynamic and photochemical stability in solution.
Abstract: A new homoleptic Cu(I) photosensitizer, [Cu(dsbtmp)2](+) (dsbtmp = 2,9-di(sec-butyl)-3,4,7,8-tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline), designed to exhibit cooperative steric hindrance, unexpectedly produced strong photoluminescence (Φ = 1.9-6.3%) and long excited state lifetimes (τ = 1.2-2.8 μs) in a broad range of coordinating and noncoordinating solvents. The combination of the 2,9-sec-butyl substituents with the neighboring 3,8-methyl groups led to a Cu(I) complex with small degrees of ground and excited state distortion ultimately producing a molecule with robust metal-to-ligand charge transfer photophysics largely insulated from solvent interactions, reversible redox chemistry serving as a strong excited state reductant, along with impressive thermodynamic and photochemical stability in solution.
143 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the nature of intraindividual performance variability over time, along with individual difference predictors of such variability, using latent growth curve methodology, and the theoretical and practical implications of performance variability for personnel selection are also discussed.
Abstract: The nature of intraindividual performance variability over time, along with individual difference predictors of such variability, was examined using latent growth curve methodology. Quarterly sales performance for a sample of securities analysts (n= 303) was measured at 8 times. Average intraindividual performance approximated a basic “learning” curve, although there were considerable individual differences in each of the latent performance growth parameters. Individual difference predictors from a biodata inventory were moderately related to these latent growth parameters. Theoretical and practical implications of performance variability for personnel selection are also discussed.
143 citations
Authors
Showing all 8365 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Eduardo Salas | 129 | 711 | 62259 |
Russell A. Barkley | 119 | 355 | 60109 |
Hong Liu | 100 | 1905 | 57561 |
Jaak Panksepp | 99 | 446 | 40748 |
Kenneth I. Pargament | 96 | 372 | 41752 |
Robert C. Green | 91 | 526 | 40414 |
Robert W. Motl | 85 | 712 | 27961 |
Evert Jan Baerends | 85 | 318 | 52440 |
Hugh Garavan | 84 | 419 | 28773 |
Janet Shibley Hyde | 83 | 227 | 38440 |
Michael L. Gross | 82 | 701 | 27140 |
Jerry Silver | 78 | 201 | 25837 |
Michael E. Robinson | 74 | 366 | 19990 |
Abraham Clearfield | 74 | 513 | 19006 |
Kirk S. Schanze | 73 | 512 | 19118 |