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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 results provide considerable support for the application of social learning theory principles to the drinking practices of collegiate youth as lower self-efficacy judgments, positive alcohol expectancies and reliance avoidant, emotion-focused coping strategies were significantly associated with increased alcohol consumption levels and greater endorsement of alcohol-related problem behaviors.
Abstract: Objective: Social learning theory models of alcohol use have assumed an increasingly influential role in recent years. Despite their growing popularity, research on social learning theory models has focused almost exclusively on establishing the independent links among particular aspects of theory and indices of alcohol use and abuse. In response to the need for research that incorporates multiple aspects of theory into a testable framework, this article endeavored to replicate and extend the Copper et al. study in a college sample (Cooper, Russell and George, J. Abnorm. Psychol. Vol. 97, pp. 218-230, 1988). Method: Subjects were 157 college student volunteers from a large midwestern university. Standard hierarchical multiple regression analyses were used to examine both the simultaneous and incremental contributions of self-efficacy judgments, alcohol expectancies and coping responses to dependent measures of alcohol use and alcohol-related problem behaviors. Results: Collectively, 22% of the variance in...

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that longitudinal studies that examine change in depression after widowhood may miss the increase in depression for men that appears to occur before their wives' deaths.
Abstract: Many cross-sectional studies have found that widowhood is psychologically a more difficult experience for men than for women. However, most longitudinal studies have found either no gender difference or a slightly greater effect for women. The authors attempted to resolve this paradox with data from the first two waves of the National Survey of Families and Households. They found that men whose wives died between the two waves were already highly depressed at time 1, compared with men whose wives survived until time 2. There was no such anticipatory effect for women. Attempts to explain men's elevated depression before widowhood, with predictors involving wife's health, caregiving, and marital quality at time 1, were largely unsuccessful. However, the authors suggest that longitudinal studies that examine change in depression after widowhood may miss the increase in depression for men that appears to occur before their wives' deaths.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 2004-Health
TL;DR: Variation across the themes underscores the need for further descriptive research designed to understand consumers’ ways of thinking about health and how the many changes in the professional and folk sectors affect lay worldviews.
Abstract: The way lay people think about health and wellness influences their health and wellness-related behaviors. This article integrates and synthesizes the research conducted to understand lay health worldviews. We identify 18 themes that capture the findings about lay health worldviews. The themes fall into four categories: definitions of health, explanations for health, external and/or uncontrollable factors impinging on health, and the place health occupies in people's lives. The results lead to the observation that lay health worldviews--or health styles--are not understood in depth, particularly in US populations. Variation across the themes underscores the need for further descriptive research designed to understand consumers' ways of thinking about health and how the many changes in the professional and folk sectors affect lay worldviews. This has implications with respect to understanding consumers' health care behaviors and developing more effective communication strategies.

133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggested that, consistent with behavioral decision theory and attitude theory, highly familiar corporations provide information that is more compatible with the tasks of both admiring and condemning than less familiar corporations.
Abstract: This research questioned the proposition that corporate familiarity is positively associated with firm reputation. Student images of familiar and unfamiliar Fortune 500 corporations were examined in 4 experiments. The results suggested that, consistent with behavioral decision theory and attitude theory, highly familiar corporations provide information that is more compatible with the tasks of both admiring and condemning than less familiar corporations. Furthermore, the judgment context may determine whether positive or negative judgments are reported about familiar companies. The notion that people can simultaneously hold contradictory images of well-known firms may help to explain the inconsistent findings on the relation between familiarity and reputation.

133 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